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Probably the same people who make the pencils.
10 centimeters or less If you mean "microwave oven", those operate at the frequency of 2.45 GHz, where the wavelength is 12.24 centimeters.
1. popcorn-follow the instructions on the bag 2. chef Boyardee- Put in microwave safe bowl and cover with paper towel. Microwave for three and a half minutes. 3. Macaroni and cheese-Buy microwaveable mac and cheese and follow the instructions on the package. 4. Bacon- Put on microwave safe plate, and cover with paper towel, then microwave until bacon is slightly brown and crunchy. 5. ham and cheese scrambeled eggs- take a small microwaveable bowl, and crack your eggs into it. Add a splash of milk to the eggs and beat them with a fork until the eggs and milk are roughly a light shade of yellow. Then add your cheese and ham into the mixture, and beat with the fork to mix the ham and cheese into the egg. Microwave for about 3 to 4 minutes.
No, a microwave isn't a computer. Most microwaves have a little (really little by modern standards) microprocessor chip in them to provide the "brainpower" to allow a user to program the appliance to perform a number of functions. A microprocessor is at the heart (it's the "brain") of a modern computer, but the microwave itself is not classified as one.
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It replaces a coax cable, which won't work at those frequencies.
underneath the back end there should be two little metal pieces. pull those out to disengage the transmission. the location varys by model
any microwave, exept for the ones that need more, should be specified. But those microwaves are not consumer products. I have a 1500 watt on a 15 amp, BTW.
There are two elements. Those are Hg and Br2.
Yes and only certain metal or substances that have those metals in them.
metal is not about money ! for those who play metal to be rich aren't metalheads .. they are " POSERS " .. such as LOG ..
Terrestrial microwave technologies share with satellite microwave technologies many of the scientific and technical improvements used to accomplish microwave transmissions. They are different in that satellite microwave technolgies seek to neutralize the effects of the atmosphere in the microwave transmissions. On the other hand, terrestrial micowave technologies seek the aid of atmospheric effects on microwaves to extend the range limitations imposed by the Earth's curvature. Examples of these terrestrial technologies include those used to exploit troposcattering and meteor-burst in microwave communications--not used at all in satellites. Professor Martinez