Best-selling author Theodore Gray is back with all-new,
spectacular experiments that demonstrate basic principles of
chemistry and physics in thrilling, and memorable ways.
For nearly a decade, Theodore Gray has been demonstrating basic
principles of chemistry and physics through exciting, sometimes
daredevil experiments that he executes, photographs, and writes
about for his monthly Popular Science column "Gray Matter."
Theo Gray's Mad Science: Experiments You Can Do at Home, But
Probably Shouldn't, published by Black Dog in 2009, collected
Gray's Popular Science columns, along with hundreds of photographs,
many of which were not published with the original columns.
Now comes the second volume of mad-scientist experiments, which
includes more dramatic, enlightening, and sometimes daring
demonstrations in which Gray dips his hand into molten lead to
demonstrate the Leidenfrost effect; crushes a tomato between two
small magnets to demonstrate the power of neodymium-iron-boron
magnets; and creates trinkets out of solid mercury to demonstrate
how the state of matter depends very much on the temperature at
which it exists.
Other experiments include:
A foil boat floating on an invisible sea
DIY X-ray photos
A bacon lance that cuts steel
Charging a smart phone with apples and pennies
And dozens more
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