Microwave Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Microwave stocks.

Microwave Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 23 KEYS What Moved Markets This Week
Nov 23 HEI Warren Buffett Just Bought More of This Top-Secret Winner That's Up 51% in 2024. Should You Buy Too?
Nov 22 RELL Q3 Earnings Highs And Lows: United Rentals (NYSE:URI) Vs The Rest Of The Specialty Equipment Distributors Stocks
Nov 21 CRNT Ceragon Networks: Undervalued And Positioned For Continued Upside
Nov 21 KEYS Will KEYS Stock Aid From the Launch of Trade Monitoring Solution?
Nov 21 KEYS Keysight Technologies price target raised to $200 from $180 at Barclays
Nov 21 KEYS Keysight Technologies price target raised to $180 from $175 at Deutsche Bank
Nov 20 KEYS S&P 500 Gains and Losses Today: Target Stock Tumbles as Earnings Miss the Mark
Nov 20 HEI These 19 stocks are poised for tax reform turbocharge - Jefferies
Nov 20 KEYS Why Is Keysight (KEYS) Stock Rocketing Higher Today
Nov 20 KEYS Keysight Technologies Soars to 52-Week High on Strong Earnings and 2025 Guidance
Nov 20 KEYS Keysight and Instrumentix Partner to Launch Complete Trade Monitoring Solution for Financial Markets
Nov 20 HEI Is HEICO Corporation (HEI) Poised To Capitalize on the Steady Aging Of The Global Commercial Aerospace Fleet?
Nov 20 HEI.A Is HEICO Corporation (HEI) Poised To Capitalize on the Steady Aging Of The Global Commercial Aerospace Fleet?
Nov 20 CRNT Is Audioeye (AEYE) Stock Outpacing Its Computer and Technology Peers This Year?
Nov 20 KEYS KEYS Q4 Earnings Top Estimate, Top Line Down on Weakness in Automotive
Nov 20 KEYS Q4 2024 Keysight Technologies Inc Earnings Call
Nov 20 KEYS Keysight Stock Rises Sharply. Here’s Why.
Nov 20 KEYS Keysight Issues Upbeat Outlook as Fiscal Fourth-Quarter Results Top Estimates
Nov 20 KEYS These Stocks Are Moving the Most Today: Nvidia, Comcast, Keysight, Super Micro, Netflix, Target, and More
Microwave

Microwaves are a form of electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths ranging from about one meter to one millimeter; with frequencies between 300 MHz (1 m) and 300 GHz (1 mm). Different sources define different frequency ranges as microwaves; the above broad definition includes both UHF and EHF (millimeter wave) bands. A more common definition in radio engineering is the range between 1 and 100 GHz (wavelengths between 0.3 m and 3 mm). In all cases, microwaves include the entire SHF band (3 to 30 GHz, or 10 to 1 cm) at minimum. Frequencies in the microwave range are often referred to by their IEEE radar band designations: S, C, X, Ku, K, or Ka band, or by similar NATO or EU designations.
The prefix micro- in microwave is not meant to suggest a wavelength in the micrometer range. Rather, it indicates that microwaves are "small" (having shorter wavelengths), compared to the radio waves used prior to microwave technology. The boundaries between far infrared, terahertz radiation, microwaves, and ultra-high-frequency radio waves are fairly arbitrary and are used variously between different fields of study.
Microwaves travel by line-of-sight; unlike lower frequency radio waves they do not diffract around hills, follow the earth's surface as ground waves, or reflect from the ionosphere, so terrestrial microwave communication links are limited by the visual horizon to about 40 miles (64 km). At the high end of the band they are absorbed by gases in the atmosphere, limiting practical communication distances to around a kilometer. Microwaves are widely used in modern technology, for example in point-to-point communication links, wireless networks, microwave radio relay networks, radar, satellite and spacecraft communication, medical diathermy and cancer treatment, remote sensing, radio astronomy, particle accelerators, spectroscopy, industrial heating, collision avoidance systems, garage door openers and keyless entry systems, and for cooking food in microwave ovens.

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