So I'm going to sum up all the ways a water molecule moves as 'jiggle'. Since 2.4ghz will make water 'jiggle', heat is produced. So lets pretend bone 'jiggles' at 3ghz (probably not true). Then if I had a magnetron tuned to 3ghz and blasted a chunk of bone it would behave the same as if I put a cup of water in my microwave oven, as in makes heat and if there's enough heat it could combust or something.
Is there a way to figure out what frequency I need for any particular material, like equation or something? It'd be neat to vibrate iron...
Oh, and sound is electromagnetic radiation too isn't it? I understand if you vibrate a voice coil in a speaker it pushes air at whatever frequency and our ears can pick up the vibrating air and translate that into what we hear in our heads. So what if you had an antenna that transmits in the same frequency as a home audio system? But air isn't being pushed around, so the answer would be you couldn't hear it?
While I'm on a roll here, I got a question about amplification too! If my previous paragraph is correct, then I need some fancy pants way to amplify a sound wave after it has left the speaker. If a sound wave hits water, it distorts right? If its in an enclosed room, it'll echo. What if I tried to shoot a sound wave through a big ol piece of plywood with a hole in the middle? How would the hole in the middle effect the sound wave?