Electromagnetic-radiation absorption of water
P. Lunkenheimer, S. Emmert, R. Gulich, M. K\"ohler, M. Wolf, M., Schwab, and A. Loidl

TL;DR
This study provides comprehensive broadband spectra of water's electromagnetic absorption, revealing that its behavior at room temperature resembles that of glass-forming liquids, and offers insights into the microscopic processes involved.
Contribution
It combines multiple spectroscopic techniques to analyze water's dielectric loss spectra across temperatures, clarifying the microscopic mechanisms of electromagnetic absorption.
Findings
Water's absorption spectrum features a prominent 20 GHz peak.
Spectral behavior of supercooled water resembles that of glass-forming liquids.
Supercooling allows disentangling spectral contributions near the glass transition.
Abstract
Why does a microwave oven work? How does biological tissue absorb electromagnetic radiation? Astonishingly, we do not have a definite answer to these simple questions because the microscopic processes governing the absorption of electromagnetic waves by water are largely unclarified. This absorption can be quantified by dielectric loss spectra, which reveal a huge peak at a frequency of the exciting electric field of about 20 GHz and a gradual tailing off towards higher frequencies. The microscopic interpretation of such spectra is highly controversial and various superpositions of relaxation and resonance processes ascribed to single-molecule or molecule-cluster motions have been proposed for their analysis. By combining dielectric, microwave, THz, and far-infrared spectroscopy, here we provide nearly continuous temperature-dependent broadband spectra of water. Moreover, we find that…
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