Microwave
Microwave uses include finding planes in the sky and speeders on the ground (radar), sending a TV signal from a station to a broadcasting antenna (communication), and heating hot dogs (microwave ovens).
Creating microwaves posed a challenge to engineers during the 1930s, as generating such high frequencies (short wavelengths) wasn't possible with existing electronic devices. With the 1939 invention of the magnetron, a diode vacuum tube capable of generating power at microwave frequencies, the development and use of microwave radiation blossomed.
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Like radio waves, microwaves can pass through clouds, rain, and fog. Unlike radio waves, however, microwaves are small enough to completely bounce off of small objects (such as airplanes).
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This is an image of the sun as captured by a radio telescope, which receives wavelengths from the microwave portion of the spectrum. Radio telescopes use parabolic dishes to "look" at a small portion of the sky. As with the other images of stellar objects shown in this feature (except for the visible-light images), the wavelengths have been mapped out in visible light colors to allow us to see them.
intro | radio | microwave | infrared | visible light | ultraviolet | x-ray | gamma
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