All you need is a microwave and, well, chocolate (a large bar).
Here’s how it works.
2/ Microwave creates standing wave inside the chamber.
That’s how your food heats up.
The microwave radiation inside the oven has points of electromagnetic radiation that oscillate the most. Those are called anti nodes.
The ones that don’t oscillate (in red) are called nodes.
3/ When you put chocolate (or anything else that can melt, like cheese gratings) and remote the rotator inside the microwave, the places where antibode points strike on chocolate melt faster than others.
4/ Keep the chocolate inside the microwave for 20 seconds (don’t forget to remote the rotator; you want a static unrotating plate inside it).
The you measure the distance between such melted points and you get the wavelength of the microwave radiation inside the oven.
5/ Most ovens work at 2.45 giga hertz (it’s also written behind your microwave).
So you have both frequency and wavelength, calculating speed is then simple arithmetic.
6/ By the way, the reason food warms up at anti nodes is because electromagnetic radiation fluctuates at those points and as it fluctuates the water molecules (that have a dipole) get pushed and pulled with it, creating friction and thus heat.
7/ Thats it!
I’m trying to do as many science experiments as I can get my hands on.
If you know other such cool experiments, let me know in replies.
Someone really ought to write a science experiments book for adults. (Most are for kids and not so interesting)
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🎉 Announcing August winners of the Gaur & Chopra Escape Velocity Grants where we give a no-strings-attached grant of Rs 50k to ambitious people under 25 for whom this money can change their life.
We have 7 winners this time.
Their names and profiles are below 👇
1/ Saikat cleared his CBSE 10th Board in 2021 with 98.6%, AIR 8. Due to pandemic, his studies have been impacted because of lack of a laptop.
He will be using the grant to purchase a laptop to continue his online classes and resume his preparation for JEE.
2/ 🏅 Vijay Kataria is currently running a Sports For Development project named Pahadi Khiladi in the district of Champawat, Uttarakhand.
He would be using the funds to purchase equipment for their program and hopefully create many new sportspeople from the region.
Going through applications for our monthly grants to young people, noticed that the answer to "how will Rs 50k change your life" falls into following categories:
- Pay their course fee
- Buy a laptop
- Fund their NGO
- Start a small business
It hurts to see so many students struggling to pay their course fees because their parents can't afford it.
It's a failure of our nation that highly determined kids have to worry about how they'll pay for their college.
But, at the same time, it also hurts to see how much emphasis our society places on traditional college education.
With so many resources available on the Internet, high-quality self-education can effectively be done for free.
It’s such a deep mystery why do fundamental entities of the universe (particles, fields, molecules) behave in a way that can be captured into neat little mathematical formulas.
This mystery *strongly* suggests the following..
1/ That if these entities behaved unpredictably, we wouldn’t have existed.
Composite systems like us who can ask questions like these can only be built on fundamental units whose behaviour is simple.
2/ That there may be universes where fundamental entities have unpredictable behaviour which can’t be captured by any formula.
Such universes possibly exist, but no being exists within them that can ask complex questions like this one.