Microwave ovens heat food quickly because they use waves that make the water inside the food move fast.
Imagine you're on a swing, when someone pushes you, you go back and forth faster. That's like what happens in your food. The microwave sends out microwaves, which are special kinds of waves. These waves hit the water molecules in the food, and just like being pushed on a swing, they make those molecules move quickly.
How microwaves work
Microwaves are like invisible pushes that happen really fast, millions of times each second! This quick movement makes the water inside your food get hotter, which then warms up everything else around it. That's why your soup gets hot so fast in the microwave.
In a regular oven, heat comes from outside and slowly moves into the food. But in a microwave, the heat starts inside the food, like having a little firework going off in every bite!
Examples
- Imagine a tiny drum inside your food that starts beating fast when you press the button, that's how it warms up so fast.
- When you microwave soup, the water molecules start moving really fast and heat up the whole pot almost instantly.
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