Please Help me

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Adinosaur24
Posts: 1
Joined: Tue Jan 26, 2010 9:12 pm
Occupation: Student
Project Question: Hello, i was wondering if the project on this site, measuring the speed of light with a microwave oven is legit and is a good project for my physics class?
Project Due Date: 2/4/10
Project Status: I am conducting my research

Please Help me

Post by Adinosaur24 »

Is the project, "Measuring the speed of light with a microwave oven" good for a science fair project? I though so, but i would like to hear what you guys think. I appreciate all comments thank you :D!
deleted-71487
Former Expert
Posts: 214
Joined: Wed Aug 24, 2005 3:07 pm

Re: Please Help me

Post by deleted-71487 »

It is a good project (I assume you're talking about https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science- ... p056.shtml). Occasionally, I've seen questions from students who have a bit off difficulty getting their measurements to come out just right depending on exactly what kind of microwave oven they have (generally if you have one with a spinning plate, that will probably work pretty well, but there are some microwaves out there that spin the emitter in a housing and leave the food stationary... those don't work).

Please let us know if there are other questions about this that we can answer for you!
../ray\..
rmarz
Expert
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Re: Please Help me

Post by rmarz »

As I understand the theory of this experiment, the rotating tray would not allow the 'hot spots' to appear, making it impossible to measure the wavelength of the magnetron. I think the target has to be stationary.

Rick Marz
sciencebuddy
Former Expert
Posts: 68
Joined: Tue Sep 23, 2008 4:59 pm
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Re: Please Help me

Post by sciencebuddy »

Yes, the target has to be stationary, but that means a microwave with a rotating tray is better. This is because you can just remove the rotating tray so that the object is stationary.

The real problem is if the emitter spins around the food, then you might have more difficulty because I'm not sure there is a way to keep the emitter stationary.
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