15-05-2013, 12:37 PM
How Microwave Ovens Work ?
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The invention of the microwave is a fantastically simple concept. Microwaves have a frequency that can penetrated water, fat, and sugar molecules and excite them. For a molecule to be excited the electrons "orbiting" the nucleus have to jump up energy levels. When this occurs the atom starts to vibrate faster than normal. When this happens in a glass of water for example, all the atoms that make up water start to move and run into each other and create friction. When friction is created energy is given off in the form of heat.
But if a microwave cooks from the inside out, how come sometimes your food is cold in the middle? This is because, depending on the quantity of food you want to heat up, the microwaves cannot penetrate completely to the center. For example a bowl of corn. Lets say you heat the corn up for 3 minutes but it's still could in the center. If you take it out and stir it, allowing the cold corn to get on the top, the microwaves will be able to penetrate the atoms and excite them and creat heat. So how come if you warm up a piece of pizza in the microwave for a longer than necessary period of time only some parts of the pizza burn? This is caused by the idea of "hot spots." Hot spots form because a microwave is sinusoidal, so it has peaks and valleys. Because of this the microwaves cannot excite all of the atoms at once. The results are hot and cold spots in the microwave. The picture on the right shows how microwaves look in a microwave after they have reflected of the oven walls for a period of time. The peaks and valleys represent the hot spots and the flat areas represent the cold spots. This occurs because the peaks and valleys have a stronger intensity and excite the atoms more quickly than the flat spots.