17-Year-Old Radio Astronomy Mystery Traced Back To Kitchen Microwave 227
New submitter Bo'Bob'O writes: The BBC reports that the scientists at the Parkes and Bleien Radio Observatories in New South Wales, Australia, have tracked down earth-based signals that had been eluding observation for 17 years. These signals, which came to be called Perytons "occurred only during office hours and predominantly on weekdays." The source, as it turned out, was located right inside the antenna's tower where impatient scientists had been opening the kitchen microwave door before its cycle had finished. As the linked paper concludes, this, and a worn magnetron caused a condition that allowed the microwaves to emit a burst of frequencies not expected by the scientists, only compounding the original mystery.
Brand? (Score:5, Funny)
I'd like to know which brand of microwave lasts 17 years?
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My parents still have their original microwave from around 1985. They had to replace the light bulb once so far. Mine is a $50 KMart special that is still working 10 years later.
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I'd like to know which brand of microwave lasts 17 years?
I'm using a 25 year old Panasonic. Before that my parents had a 34 year old microwave. Basic microwaves are so simple it's rare that they fail. The new inverter ones breakdown easily though (parents are on their 3rd one in 10 years)
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I'd like to know which brand of microwave lasts 17 years?
I'm using a 25 year old Panasonic. Before that my parents had a 34 year old microwave. Basic microwaves are so simple it's rare that they fail. The new inverter ones breakdown easily though (parents are on their 3rd one in 10 years)
I have a 15 year old Panasonic. I even went looking for something to replace it a while back, wanting a stainless steel one instead of white but, based on the reviews, most models today seem to be built to last only 3 years.
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This isn't just the case for Microwaves. Refrigerators, washing machines, and many other big appliances seem to be built with a 10 year maximum lifespan. Somewhere along the way, the manufacturers figured out just how long a device should work so that users won't think of them as defective (breaking in the first year = bad) but not lasting so long that they miss out on people buying new devices to replace the older ones. If your washing machine last
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If you have a 10 year old washing machine, the likelihood is that a new one will pay itself back in energy + water savings in a few years. The efficiency improvements in white goods over the last decade have been astounding.
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Remember to include the manufacturing energy consumed to replace it every 10 years. It is not obvious that the small efficiency increases outweigh the difference in lifespan. A belief one way or the other needs to be based on numbers, or else "efficiency" isn't being understood.
Also remember that the efficiency numbers published on the device label is just a benchmark. It doesn't compare actual loads. For example, newer machines tend to waste less power when you do really small loads. That really, really he
Re:Brand? (Score:4, Insightful)
Why do people keep talking about the energy used in manufacturing as if it is a separate thing? That energy is already built into the purchase price of the item, from the energy consumed by the machines digging the ore to the truck delivering the finished product to your doorstep, and including all of the energy which in turn was used to produce those machines.
It doesn't need to be factored separately. It's already a part of the equation.
That said, the primary energy savings in a new-fangled front-load washer/drier combo seems to be in having a better/faster spin cycle: The less-wet that the clothes are after they exit the washer, the less heat energy the drier needs to use to finish the job of producing dry clothes.
(And none of this beats a washer (any semi-modern automatic washer) and an outdoor clothesline, weather-permitting.)
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10 years is about the average time people stay in a home until moving and when people buy a new home they like to buy their own stuff for it
win win
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Household here has gotten through many microwaves over the years. Not one from electrical fault. It's always the body that goes - paint cracks, steam gets in, steel corrodes. Blisters and rust.
There's just not much to go wrong in one. There are only two moving parts: The cooling fan, and the motor that spins the turntable. Both of which are done using brushless motors. The actual microwave stuff is a transformer, capacitor, diode and old-fashioned vacuum tube coupled to a waveguide.
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No magnetron?
Re:Brand? (Score:5, Funny)
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Almost all of them?
Microwaves are like Volvos: they keep working long past the point where you decide you need a new one.
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whatever my mother in law has and whatever doesn't come out of walmart
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I have a 30 year old Panasonic and a 29 year old that I don't remember the brand name. They both get lots of use and still work great!
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I know someone who beats all the rest of you: my mother's bff still uses her Amana Radarange she got in 1969.
Re:Brand? (Score:5, Funny)
Only two more payments and it's all hers.
Re:Brand? (Score:4, Informative)
What amazes me most is the failure to notice the modulation frequency and ti's phase lock to local power.
Non inverter (all older) micrwaves use a 1/2 wave voltage doubler so the magnitron is only on for 1/2 the AC cycle. Google Microwave oven power supply to see a typical schematic.
For unexpected frequencies, a non linerate in RF from arcing in the door seal can cause odd order harmonics. EG splattered food on the door seal area.
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Actually, I believe most safety switches don't cut out the power supply to the magnetron - they instead either signal the microprocessor to shut down the power supply or
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For a more reliable product, the door's interlock would first signal the microprocessor to shut things down normally, but then manually cut power if the processor doesn't respond. For similar behavior on high voltage products (for example), the hardware has like 60 ms or so to become safe after the interlock opens. For a product I worked on recently, we budgeted around 1/3rd of that for the standard digital system to operate and bring things down cleanly, and only if it didn't would the analog circuit kic
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There's a Sharp in my kitchen -- a vent hood model -- that was in there and old when I bought the house in 1999. By my count that's a minimum of 16, and given that it was old even then, probably much more.
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I'd like to know which brand of microwave lasts 17 years?
*.*
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I'd like to know which brand of microwave lasts 17 years?
Any brand, so long as it was made more than 25 years ago or so.
My kids like to watch vintage TV shows, and in one sitcom from the early 80s there was a plot line involving a TV remote -- this was back when remotes were still an expensive novelty. I paused and pointed out the thing in question. It was huge blocky moster of metal and wood, and looked like it had been forged by Durin in the deeps of Mount Gundabad. While virtually everything they use is incomparably more sophisticated than that thing, nothi
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Of all the Cheap Chinese Crap I've had to deal with, remote controls have probably been the least troublesome. They generally live as long as the devices they control, and who knows what's left in them after that?
Now if only the Rii Touch keyboard had been as reliable...
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Not sure of the brand but my mother's microwave was bought in 89. Still works just fine. So that is 26 years. Massive beast too.
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I'd like to know which brand of microwave lasts 17 years?
Maybe it’s one of the originals made by Raytheon.
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You mean like one of these [wikipedia.org]>?
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Science gets Smarter (Score:2)
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The best practice is to assume that they're experts in only their field, and to simply not judge in others. Though in this instance, you'd think that since they wo
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well it's basically the better versed someone is in a specific domain, they get hit with the double whammy of getting out of practice in everything else, while maintaining the delusion that they are masters in anything they attempt.
Linus Pauling later in his career is a /fantastic/ example of this.
NEW SOUTH WALES, you insensitive clod! (Score:5, Funny)
Thar she blows! Typo off the starboard bow! Give it the trusty nitpick, er, harpoon...
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Thar she blows! Typo off the starboard bow! Give it the trusty nitpick, er, harpoon...
Close. It should be "Nuke the Whales"
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Thar she blows! Typo off the starboard bow! Give it the trusty nitpick, er, harpoon...
Close. It should be "Nuke the Whales"
Keep up please, now days it is Nuke the unborn gay whales
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Nuke a gay unborn baby whale with AIDs for Jesus!
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Shows what you know! Those are the fresh Confederate cetacean recruits!
15 co-authors (Score:3)
I'm surprised that the paper (http://arxiv.org/pdf/1504.02165v1.pdf) required 15 co-authors. It seems like the sort of thing I'd give to an undergrad to write once somebody figured it out...
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In my experience, papers where you're not the first or second author aren't really counted as toward a single person's research performance. For the purposes of looking at project performance and adviser performance, it doesn't matter if the adviser or PI's name actually appears on the paper.
Extra authors usually comes down to either courtesy or policy, to acknowledge those that helped contribute to the paper or project.
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Maybe that's everybody in their office who's nuked some popcorn to generate the mystery in the first place.
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I think this is normal for fields like astronomy which involve a large number of scientists sharing a single, very expensive, piece of equipment.
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Perhaps it happened a touch more often around noon,
If you read the paper, you'll find the histogram of events. The count for 1200 to 1300 local was 25, and if you combine the "lunch hour" (1100 to 1400) the total is 40. The total events attributed to FRB was 12. "A touch more" is an understatement. The paper makes the comment that they were probably under-detecting the "lunch hour" since that's when the dish was often down for maintenance.
there's also an interesting spike from 0800-0900, which I would guess is people getting to work nuking their first cof
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once had a system that would go down between 10 and 12. Trouble was NT used a longer time stamp than 98 was a 'y2k upgrade'
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They should consider "juicing it up" to make it sound more worthy:
"Using Dr. Foo's bi-directional triangulation method, the source of the mysterious Peryton radiation was eventually pin-pointed after 17 years of difficult and dangerous research among native fauna.
The source turned out to be a cuboid cooking mechanism used by the species, Homo Sapiens. Further research was conducted to understand the pattern of behavior related to the cuboid cooking device.
I
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It was observed that the Homo Sapiens were warned by their familial matriarch not to open the magic heating device before it had ceased to display magic properties. However, a subset of the pack ignored her and needlessly risked their genetic futures, creating the high probability of either individual sterility or dangerous mutations leading to unwarranted increased sentience or higher levels of rational thought.
FTFY.
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Hmmm .... (Score:2)
Somewhere in there is a Farside cartoon waiting to happen.
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Re:Hmmm .... (Score:5, Funny)
A professor once told the class he was tasked with finding the source of intermittent "garbage" characters emanating from a data entry work-station. After checking and swapping all the hardware, IT staff couldn't find the cause. So he sat to observe the work-station in action. Turns out the data entry lady had large bosoms that occasionally bumped the keyboard.
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A similar story local to me:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/new... [dailymail.co.uk]
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That would be "a large bosom," not "large bosoms." It means the whole front part of the chest, not an individual boob.
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us geeks typically have insufficient exposure to the subject matter to perfect those sorts of details
Watch The Dish (Score:2)
One of my favorite films was "The Dish" staring Sam Neil. A slightly fictionalized retelling of how Parkes was used to broadcast the Appollo 11 Moon landings.
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In the movie they RECEIVED the video from the moon. They didn't Broadcast it.
Good Job Brainiacs (Score:2)
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An icy core with a napalm mantle... disguised under an unassuming flaky pastry crust.
Obligatory (Score:2)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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It says right on the packet, "For best results, thaw in refrigerator before cooking."
You just need a combination refrigerator/microwave.
Elude observation? (Score:2)
And a signal that happens only on weekdays during office hours? They thought there was any chance that these were extraterrestrial in origin? "Searching the galaxy for 17 years.." How did the aliens get our calendar to know when we have weekends? (I know -- they went into the Home Depot and picked up a free one before going out front to find temp work for the day...) That still doesn't explain on
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They did not spend millions of dollars looking for the microwave oven, and they knew all along that the signal was man-made. Figuring out precisely which item made it is the kind of thing that gets you in the newspapers, so they did a little PR stunt.
Their usual work changes our understanding of the universe but does not have a chance to make it into the mainstream news. Can you begrudge them their 15 minutes of fame?
Re:Elude observation? (Score:5, Insightful)
They did not spend millions of dollars looking for the microwave oven,
Time on a radio telescope and the associated equipment (including supercomputer time) is not free. Perhaps a bit of hyperbole, but not excessive considering the venue of my comment.
and they knew all along that the signal was man-made.
I'll yield on that one. The paper says the properties of the signal "suggested" it was in the near field. It was only TFA (BBC) that says:
Figuring out precisely which item made it is the kind of thing that gets you in the newspapers,
Figuring out that a microwave oven generated microwave signals picked up by a microwave antenna at the same building may make the newspapers in Australia, but in advanced countries it wouldn't. OTH, we do have to own the idea that people in the US don't seem to understand that cell phones use radio waves, so nobody is completely innocent. The difference is that these are radio astronomy scientists and the cell-phone ignoramii are mostly Joe Sixpack and his cousin Bubba types.
Can you begrudge them their 15 minutes of fame?
You think someone becomes famous because they discover the obvious? You ought to read the paper. It's a hoot.
First, they used a communications receiver with a directional antenna that made a full circle every 20 minutes and obtained 0.1 sec of data at any given frequency. That they thought this receiver would observe RFI that lasts for 200ms and occurs rarely (three events during Jan-Mar 2015) is, well, not flattering to their experiment design qualifications.
Then they tested three microwaves at three locations by looking for emissions while heating a cup of water for 10 - 60s. Interestingly, they found perytons during this test. What they couldn't figure out is how the microwave they were testing at the time could have gotten a signal to the antenna -- it was blocked. A real puzzler. Then they found out that they had forgotten their control protocol for the experiment. Someone was using one of the other two microwave ovens while they were testing the third. Basic science: if you want to test object A for causality, you don't allow object B to be used at the same time. Corollary 1: if you're just going to come up with reasons why the observations were impossible, why bother making them in the first place?
Long story short: a facility that needs to avoid RFI at microwave frequencies took no precautions to avoid RFI at microwave frequencies and spent a lot of time (where the Beeb comes up with 17 years I can't determine) trying to figure out where the RFI they were seeing came from, and quite a bit of time analyzing what they knew was RFI so they could distinguish what they already knew was RFI from signals they already know are galactic in origin.
Anyone who knows that radio waves aren't magic and that microwave ovens are called microwave ovens because they use microwave radiation is scratching his head wondering why they didn't just get rid of the microwave ovens 17 years ago and not put 17 years worth of scientific research into galactic radio phenomena in jeopardy. The fact that they now have to defend the observations of FRB as real could have been prevented by one simple rule: no sources of RF on site. That they've publicly admitted they didn't take this obvious, basic preventative measure isn't "fame".
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If you assume the word "galaxy" implies "aliens," you're going to have a hard time understanding any radio astronomy.
Actually, they weren't searching the galaxy. As the abstract mentions, the (real) FRB 010724 signals are excellent candidates for genuine extra-galactic transients.
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If you assume the word "galaxy" implies "aliens," you're going to have a hard time understanding any radio astronomy.
Whoosh. And I thought the comment about Home Depot would be a dead giveaway that the aliens bit was a joke.
Seventeen years? (Score:2)
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Yeah, but it always happened when they were gone...it was like those god damned aliens *waited* until lunch time to pull their stunt, and no matter how fast the scientists rushed to get back - sometimes not even waiting until the food was done - it always happened right before they got back. ;-)
(btw - I naturally didn't rtfa, but if they worked odd shifts from time to time it would have show up occasionally during non-work hours, throwing them off.)
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A lot of people are making wild assumptions just based on the phrasings in the media.
It was known for that long as an Earth-based signal. There is not actually a huge need to explain all of those. There are lots of Earth-based signals a radio telescope picks up. The goal is mostly to identify what the signal looks like, how to detect it, how to subtract or exclude it from the results.
You make it sound almost like you think they spent 17 years looking for this. No. They first observed it 17 years ago. 17 yea
Reminds me of an old joke (Score:2)
Patient: "Doctor, I get a sharp pain in my eye when I drink my tea."
Doctor: "Take the spoon out of the cup."
This is basically the same thing.
NRAO shields its microwave oven (Score:2)
This article [wired.com] claims that the National Radio Astronomy Observatory [nrao.edu] in Green Bank, WV, has the "cafeteria's microwave oven is kept in a shielded cage" and "Large chambers designed to absorb radio waves - including a 5,000-square-foot conference room - have been built to make sure that, as Sizemore tells it, "radiation generated in the building stays in the building."
I visited NRAO once and got to drive a diesel '69 Checker cab (no spark plugs).
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See! (Score:2)
I told you the Burrito Nebula wasn't real
Virtual Quantum Burrito (Score:2)
Mmmm... burrito...
Not news (Score:4, Interesting)
I worked at Jodrell Bank (the largest radio telescope in the UK) for a summer almost 10 years ago, and their on-site kitchen microwave was surrounded by a Faraday cage to prevent the microwave from interferring with signals picked up by the telescope.
To imply that astronomers had no idea that the microwave could be responsible is just a lie, this is a well-known problem that was solved a long time ago.
AT&T DSL mystery tied to faulty CFL ballast (Score:5, Interesting)
I had a friend who was bemoaning how his "crappy" AT&T DSL service would flake out every evening at about the same time, and he'd had techs out to replace his DSL modem twice, re-do the wiring to his house, everything! He asked me whether I was happy with TWC (I wasn't), because he was fed up and was going to switch.
We got talking in general. I asked him whether he'd also done any renovating around his house, no matter what type. He admitted that he'd recently replaced all of his exterior house lights with CFL equivalents, and I asked him whether any were on timers, sensors, etc. He admitted that there was an exterior flood light on a light sensor.
I asked him if that sensor turned on that lamp about the same time of day his DSL service flaked out. His expression dropped. He replaced that one light with an incandescent, and the problem went away.
Wrong Wrong Wrong (Score:2, Insightful)
The reason for Linux's success was due to the momentum that BSD/386 had built up. With the AT&T Lawsuit, everyone was looking for an alternative that AT&T could not claim was derivative work. Linux was in the right place, at the right time. They all jumped on, and ran! The rest is history.
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I'll go shoot myself now.
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Power is killed, but the magnetron keeps spinning and some microwaves can escape. Best to hit the stop button and wait a second before opening the door.
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An 8ms (falling phase of the 60hz power cycle) broad-spectrum burst of microwaves from a tired old oven won't cause even the slightest bit of damage to you.
Yeah .. but the microwave burst from that 50Hz power cycle in Australia is really nasty - its just like all the animals that either want to eat you or simply kill you.
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Why would they have used staples? A vasectomy requires two or at most three very small stitches on each side. I rather suspect that the patient was pulling his co-workers' leg.
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Why would they have used staples?
Easier to undo. From here [uhsurology.com]:
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Undo? So they're actually providing for that now? When I had mine (in the last century) that was not even a consideration. A reversal was a $20,000 procedure with a 30+ percent failure rate. This should prevent some heartbreak.
I still think the patient was putting one over on his co-workers, though.
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Undo? So they're actually providing for that now?
Yes. Couples who decide they don't want any more children and she doesn't want to muck with her hormones or get her tubes tied and he doesn't want to wear balloons for the next fifteen years get divorced and remarried and suddenly not being able to have kids becomes an issue for the new wife, for one example.
A reversal was a $20,000 procedure with a 30+ percent failure rate.
Yes, cutting/cauterizing a small tube is pretty easy. Sewing it back up after a few years is not.
I still think the patient was putting one over on his co-workers, though.
I think the fact that anyone knew he was feeling anything in that area means something was being pulle
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Power is killed, but the magnetron keeps spinning and some microwaves can escape.
Magnetrons don't spin. The electrons in a magnetron spin (all electrons have spin) and they circulate in a cylindrical chamber. The magnetron itself doesn't move and it has no moving parts to "keep spinning".
The frequency is determined for the most part by the physical dimensions of the magnetron (effectively forming an LC circuit), but the frequency will "chirp" as the voltage on the tube changes. That's the source of the "FRB" (fast radio burst) they were seeing.
An interesting comment in the reference [wikipedia.org]
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The magnetron might not spin, but it does have inertia of a sort. It's driven by a voltage doubler circuit off of a transformer: That means a capacitor and an inductor, both of which store a considerable amount of energy. Cut the power and it will take a few milliseconds before their energy is exhausted.
Re:Defective (Score:5, Informative)
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Your mom is pretty good, getting the important implications wrong and the unimportant reasons right, that is way above par.
But if she wants to lower your cancer risk, tell her to install radon sensors in the basement.
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Enough radiation to be measured on the outside equipment? While I'm sure the equipment is - by necessity - quite sensitive, that still doesn't sound particularly healthy for anyone in front of the microwave when it was opened.
My advice, look up "mircowaves" on wikipedia.
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Not everybody has a perfect heat balance in their testes. Considering that this is "radiation" in the same sense that the bright stuff that comes out of an LED is "radiation," heat damage would be the concern. It is true that repeated heat damage is a cancer risk. (see: skin cancer) However, the amount of radiation emitted in this case is far below the amount needed to cause tissue damage. So the only issue involving the testes would be heat regulation. Since we know that all genetic traits are distributed