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Can a microwave oven blast the entire quantum mechanic?

Did I say microwave oven?
Maybe it is an error and I meant a microwave refrigerator....
The text analyses one of the simplest paradoxes of the modern physics:
A microwave radiation with a temperature of radiation of few Kelvins is able to boil food or to melt dielectrics and metals, or to rise their temperature up to 2000 K.
How is possible?
If blackbody theory is correct a frequency of microwave at 2,4 GHz has to produce a temperature of few Kelvin and of course this has to be the most simple and efficient refrigerator!
But the situation is completely opposite and this is only the beginning of a succession of absurdities...
According to same quantum theory, a material body kept in contact with microwave radiation, once it arrive at thermal equilibrium with this radiation, will become a secondary source of microwave radiation. Has someone, got out the hot turkey from the microwave and measured how much remnant microwave radiation and for how long is emitted by poor animal?
Has someone ever questioned how is possible for a material body to absorb microwaves, more precisely photons with energy of few mili eV, and to emit back photons in visible, with energies of few eV?
Practically it is necessary for a molecule to remain in an excited state for minutes or decades of minutes in order to cumulate up to 1000 successive microwave photons hits!
Why, in this case, a source of infrared does not ever permit to obtain a reemission spectrum in visible or X ray?
The entire problem is analysed in the link:
http://www.elkadot.com/ro/termodinamica/cuantic_microunde.htm

Finally is worth to be reminded that microwaves do not respect any of the laws established for the thermal radiation.
It is not possible to deduce the temperature of microwave radiation based on Wien displacement law. The Stefan Boltzmann law is not respected because the material body does not become a source of secondary microwave radiation.
The Kirchoff law related to the thermal equilibrium is not respected, because a body subjected to microwave irradiation shifts the reemission spectra toward infrared and visible domain of energies.
Therefore, in proposed theory quantum idea is ruled out and it is categorised as a huge error which regrettably is still maintained in physics.
As was already presented, the distribution of ionization energies for electrons in atoms has nothing to do with a probabilistic interpretation and consequently rule out the quantum theory too. There are two links, one in 2007 and another revision in 2010:
http://www.elkadot.com/en/atomic/Ionization_energy_variation.htm

http://www.elkadot.com/en/chemistry/Ionization%20energy%20and%20work%20function.htm

The present text is not a novelty too. An old text related to microwave working principle was already posted under the name: induction lamps and quantum hypothesis.

http://www.elkadot.com/en/physical-chemistry/induction%20lamp%20and%20quantum%20hypothesis.htm
But who cares!?
Our leaders are busy with money allocation. Science is made from the tip of the pen ….
More absurd an idea appears to be, more chances to be published in a recognised journal.

Best regards up to a new research related to blackbody radiation….

Sorin Cosofret

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Originally Posted By: sorincosofret
According to same quantum theory, a material body kept in contact with microwave radiation, once it arrive at thermal equilibrium with this radiation, will become a secondary source of microwave radiation.


Yes, and also any black body at any temperature should emit microwaves, but typically at very low intensity.

Why don't you try measuring it to test the black body theory?


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