Dr_Z said: A good infusion of nuclear power makes everything better. Submarines,spaceships,giant robots,bombs,giant monsters so why not try it with cooking?
Fatal_Exception said: We already do. It's called a "microwave".
Given that she can control all aspects of nuclear fusion, she could probably limit energy output to the more innocuous forms of radiation; like infrared, or as you pointed out: microwaves (and the misconception that microwaves "nuke" things, continues to baffle me as microwave ovens cause no radioactive decay).
Ipswich67 said: (and the misconception that microwaves "nuke" things, continues to baffle me as microwave ovens cause no radioactive decay).
Depends who you talk to, I've seen reports both ways, both sides being very reputable scientists. One a specialist on Nuclear Reaction, the other a specialist on Application of Radiation. The Radiation Specialist was the one that said it actually did cause radiation damage, just at a level so small that it'd take 50 years of build up for the human body to begin feeling the effects. Modern Microwaves haven't been around for 50 years, therefore his theory cannot be disproven yet. ...I'm not exactly holding my breath, where's my TV dinner? -goes to freezer-