How Everything Works: Making Physics Out of the Ordinary

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John Wiley & Sons, Aug 28, 2007 - Science - 736 pages
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A user's manual for our everyday world!

"Whether a curious layperson, a trained physicist, or a beginning physics student, most everyone will find this book an interesting and enlightening read and will go away comforted in that the world is not so strange and inexplicable after all."
From the Foreword by Carl Wieman, Nobel Laureate in Physics 2001, and CASE/Carnegie US University Professor of the Year 2004

If you didn't know better, you might think the world was filled with magic—from the household appliances that make our lives easier to the CDs and DVDs that fill our world with sounds and images. Even a simple light bulb can seem mysterious when you stop to think about it.

Now in How Everything Works, Louis Bloomfield explains the physics behind the ordinary objects and natural phenomena all around us, and unravels the mysteries of how things work. Inside, you'll find easy-to-understand answers to scores of fascinating questions, including:

  • How do microwave ovens cook food, and why does metal sometimes cause sparks in a microwave?
  • How does an iPod use numbers to represent music?
  • How do CDs and DVDs use light to convey information, and why are they so colorful?
  • How can a CT or MRI image show a cross-sectional view of a person without actually entering the body?
  • Why do golf balls have dimples?
  • How does a pitcher make a curveball curve and knuckleball jitter about in an erratic manner?
  • Why is the sun red at sunrise and sunset?
  • How does a fluorescent lamp produce visible light?

You don't need a science or engineering background to understand How Everything Works, all you need is an active curiosity about the extraordinary world all around you.

 

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Contents

Chapter
1
Chapter 2
29
Chapter 3
59
Chapter 4
87
Chapter 5
125
Chapter 7
197
Chapter 8
249
Chapter 9
293
Chapter 13
427
Chapter 14
453
Chapter 15
489
Chapter 16
527
Chapter 17
563
Chapter 18
599
Appendices
647
Glossary
653

Chapter 10
323
Chapter 11
351
Chapter 12
399
Photo Credits
693
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

No one is better at making physics come to life than Louis Bloomfield. Widely recognized for his teaching of physics and science to non-science students at the University of Virginia, Professor Bloomfield is the co-host of the Discovery Channel television show “Some Assembly Required,” premiering in the fall of 2007.

Bibliographic information