Harman Patil (Editor)

The Flying Circus of Physics

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Goodreads

Language
  
English

ISBN
  
978-0-471-76273-7

Author
  
Jearl Walker

Publisher
  
John Wiley & Sons

OCLC
  
64595915

4.4/5
Flipkart

Cover artist
  
Norm Christiansen

Pages
  
331

Originally published
  
January 1975

Page count
  
331

Country
  
United States of America

The Flying Circus of Physics t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQCRsQ9pie1ftPeM

Subject
  
Physics --Problems, exercises, etc.

Publication date
  
1975 (1st ed.) 2006-06-01 (2nd ed.)

Similar
  
Principles of Physics, Fundamentals of Physics: Textbook, Fundamentals of Physics, Glencoe Physics: Principles, Thinking Physics

The Flying Circus of Physics by Jearl Walker (1975, published by John Wiley and Sons, second edition in 2006), 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 about 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.

Contents

  • Preface
  • Chapter 1. Slipping Between Falling Drops. (Motion).
  • Chapter 2. Racing on the Ceiling, Swimming Through Syrup. (Fluids).
  • Chapter 3. Hiding Under the Covers, Listening or the Monsters. (Sound).
  • Chapter 4. Striking at the Heat in the Night. (Thermal Processes).
  • Chapter 5. Ducking First a Roar and Then a Flash. (Electricity and Magnetism).
  • Chapter 6. Splashing Colors Everywhere, Like a Rainbow. (Optics).
  • Chapter 7. Armadillos Dancing Against a Swollen Moon. (Vision).
  • Index
  • References

    The Flying Circus of Physics Wikipedia