By Internet waves, one would assume you mean WiFi. When talking about WiFi, it does not use electromagnetic waves but instead uses radio waves like your TV or radio does.
Radio waves.
WiFi routers use radio waves as electromagnetic waves to transmit data over a wireless network. These radio waves typically operate in the 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz frequency band, allowing devices to connect to the internet wirelessly within a certain range of the router.
No. Radar waves are one category of radio waves. Think of all the radio waves that are all around you right now . . . AM radio, FM radio, police and fire radio, highway patrol radio, taxi radio, television picture and sound radio waves, cellphone radio waves, garage-door-opener radio waves, bluetooth radio waves, WiFi waves, microwaves ... and you can't see any of them ! Radar waves can easily be there in the group.
wifi
yes,they do use radio waves
The benefits of WiFi internet radio include the ability to hear radio stations that may be being broadcast from anywhere in the world. Conventional radio relies on radio waves that can be transmitted to a set distance on a set frequency band. WiFi internet radio requires just a stable internet connection.
Absolutely. Computing is highly integrated into radio frequency (RF) type communications. Examples of RF integration include Bluetooth, WiFi, and RF peripherals such as the mouse and keyboard.
WiFi uses electromagnetic waves in the microwave band, around 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz.
Stop the use of wifi, radios, televisions, satellites, cellular phones, microwaves and any similar wireless devices?
Radio sound is heard through the use of radio waves, which are electromagnetic waves that can carry information from one point to another. These waves are transmitted from a radio station and received by a radio receiver, such as a radio or smartphone, which then converts the waves into sound waves that we can hear.
Yes. A good rule of thumb is that if the device has an antenna, it uses radio waves. An antenna would not be needed if it didn't use radio waves.