That’s a really dumb question. Oh well.
I’m doing a project in Chem II and I have to do an "above and beyond" demonstration for it. I kinda just wanna make brownies, but my project’s on UV light… so yeah.
If not, is there any other "above and beyond" demonstration you can think of? I really don’t know what to do. I have to write a six-page paper along with it -.-;

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2 Comments so far »

  1.  

    Hden - said

    December 16 2010 @ 03:41

    UV light can cook some things, but not brownies.
    Here’s some cool stuff I’ve seen using UV light: black light stuff, identifying rocks by the color they flouresce, killing bacteria off the goggles in the goggle cabinet.

  2.  

    science_guy - said

    December 16 2010 @ 03:41

    You can certainly – might be hard to produce something to do it, but the waves will carry enough energy to cook it – heck they cook us if we stay out in the sunny too long (sunburn sucks). YOu simply need to condense it or enhance it if you wanna cook fast

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