There are many
powerful radio wavelength transmitters now in orbit and more are planned.
Not exact matches
Dr Rita Colwell, director of the U.S. National Science Foundation, and Dr Catherine Cesarsky, director general of the European Southern Observatory, today signed a historic agreement jointly to construct and operate ALMA, the Atacama Large Millimeter Array, the world's largest and most
powerful radio telescope operating at millimeter and sub-millimeter
wavelengths.
So accordingly one might assume the
radio waves of say the 50,000 watt AM
radio station could heat something - as it's waves are a comparability a massively huge
wavelength - and must be huge and very
powerful in terms heating anything.