You have my permission to conduct that particular experiment.
I'll read about it in the news I'm sure.
2006-09-06 13:46:52
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Well, the RF radiation emitted by the outside microwave would cause arcs across the metal casing of the inside microwave. If there are apertures in the inside microwave's case (and there would be, for ventilation) and the RF wavelength of the outside microwave was of a wavelength short enough to penetrate the apertures (probably would be), you'd have arcing across the circuitry of the inner microwave and it would promptly stop working. Even then a power cord running from the inner microwave out of the outermicrowave door would arc as would any battery power for the inner microwave.
If the two RF radiations were able to meet, which might be the gist of your question, you'd have varying points of constructive and destructive interference among the radiation waveforms - some waves may cancel and others may reinforce.
2006-09-06 21:00:54
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answer #2
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answered by Adashi 3
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Nothing really different from microwaving any large piece of metal. You'd get some major arcing from one MW to the other, but that's about it.
Microwaves can't penetrate metal, so nothing unusual would be going on inside the MW that was being MW'ed.
2006-09-06 20:48:29
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answer #3
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answered by R[̲̅ə̲̅٨̲̅٥̲̅٦̲̅]ution 7
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How are you going to plug in the one that you put inside the other? just wondering
2006-09-06 20:49:49
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answer #4
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answered by hesjim57 3
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Do it and let me know
2006-09-06 20:54:47
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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An explosion.
2006-09-06 20:58:48
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answer #6
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answered by Paley Pale 5
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A FIRE!!!!! rite???
2006-09-06 20:49:47
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answer #7
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answered by maddie ;; 2
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