Flying Circus Of Physics

The Flying Circus of Physics by Jearl Walker (published by John Wiley and Sons), is a book that poses (and answers) about a thousand questions concerned with everyday physics. The emphasis is strongly on phenomena that might be encountered in one's daily life. From the preface: "if you start thinking about physics when you are cooking, flying, or just lazing next to a stream, then I will feel the book was worthwhile". Typically, the questions posed by the book are phenomena that many readers will have encountered, but not thought through physically. For example: "Why do many candles, especially small ones, flicker and pop in the last moments before burning out? What determines the frequency of flickering?" (3.110). Walker's answer involves qualitative arguments of capillarity, negative feedback, and latent heat of vaporization.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
domestic policy of the george w. bush administration
campylobacterales
final justice
allowat sakima
walter r. tucker iii
idiopathic short stature
intermezzo
pidgin algol
murphys
esteban edward torres
hainzel (crater)
edward belcher
hyperbolic orthogonal
bhakta
sunga empire
david meny
hoi aga
history of corsets
eulachon
dunnes stores
temp
warcraft races
gus savage
cheesehead
vmac
high elves (warcraft)
ron taylor
shunga
virgin (band)
science north
jearl walker
new york state highway 890
canon ef s lens mount
lindsay crouse
alan wheat
john j. degioia
dynamic earth
fornaldarsaga
list of uc berkeley alumni
european engineer
time chasers
list of uc berkeley faculty
mel reynolds
viking press