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Wednesday, 18 September 2019

Who Invented the Microwave?

Who Invented the Microwave?
By Andrew Kim

The microwave’s contribution to the cooking industry has been massive, and spawned a whole new generation of “fast food”. Things like noodles, popcorn, rice; anything that needs heating to be cooked was made available to the people who may not have the time, money or effort to cook the more traditional and accepted way.

Ever had any leftovers? Chicken, Spaghetti, Pizza… There are many foods that you need to go through a little bit of trouble to heat up. Unless if have the power of the MICROWAVE! Eating leftovers was never so easy!

Compared to how much we use this wonderful invention, it is quite surprising that most people do not know how the microwave works and how it was invented.

So who did invent the microwave? Well, inventing this was actually a complete accident! The person who did was called Percy Spencer. He worked for a company called Raytheon, and back in World War II, they were developing microwave radar transmitters.

In 1945, on one casual day, Spencer found out that a candy bar that was in his pocket was starting to melt. The microwaves from the radars have been heating up his candy bar.

After a bit of playing around and researching, he figured out that the microwaves may have been gathering up to heat food. Spencer made the very first oven using microwave technology.

But how does the microwave oven work?
Microwaves are absorbed by water, fats, and sugars and it is converted to heat. And since the microwave only needs to heat the food itself and not the things around it, it uses up a lot less energy than traditional ovens.

When the microwave first came out, almost six feet tall (183cm) and weighed about 750 pounds. (340 kgs) It was also $5,000, which would be equal to over $52,000 today.

So the next time you heat up something in the microwave, you’ll know a little piece of the history behind this amazing invention.

Wednesday, 11 September 2019

Share a Drawing!

This week in our Literacy Contracts, we had to write how we felt and find the definition of it. We then had to get an image than suits this emotion. This is what I chose. 💮



Wednesday, 28 August 2019

Drawing a Cardioid


This week in our Math Contracts, we had to draw a cardioid connecting the numbers by 2s. We also looked at images of how this cardioid is applied in our everyday lives without us even knowing. This is what I drew!

Wednesday, 21 August 2019

How did a picture of a black hole get taken?



⚠️ PLEASE HOLD DOWN THE NEXT SLIDE KEY AS THIS IS A FRAME BY FRAME ANIMATION GOING AT 10FPS ⚠️

This week in our Literacy Contracts, we had to research and make an Animation of a thing that wanted to know more about on Google Presentations.  For me, I was curious how NASA had taken a photo of a Black Hole. So I made a Slide on it. Hope you enjoy! 😄

Wednesday, 31 July 2019

Newspaper Article

This week in our Literacy Contract, we had to make a Newspaper Article on any topic we liked.
ON ONE CONDITION:
We had to include these words:
grateful, bank, banknotes, disaster, helpers, honest, flurry, recovered

I teamed up with my classmates, Kaden and Evan.
We decided to get a bit invested into the a e s t h e t i c and we decided to create a whole world inside this paper and add another article. We also changed the background into a more old looking piece of paper.

Wednesday, 3 July 2019

Wonderopolis Task

What causes Shooting Stars?

By Andrew Kim


People believe that if you make a wish after seeing a shooting star, it will come true. Shooting stars are fascinating, but it's not really a wish casting magical thing.

Stars and Planets are things we think about when we think “Space”. They are also the easiest things to see in the night sky. But they aren't the only things moving around in space.

There are rocks moving around too. These rocks can be as tiny as particles of dust, and some are bigger than boulders. These rocks are actually what shooting stars are. They may seem to glow and twinkle like stars, but it’s actually them going through the Earth's atmosphere and burning up.

Wednesday, 19 June 2019

Matariki Slide


This week in our Literacy Contracts, we had to make a Google Presentation on what we learned about Matariki these past weeks. I teamed up with Evan to create this. This is the final product.