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From Newton to Einstein is a book devoted to classical mechanics.
"Classical" here includes the theory of special relativity as well
because, as argued in the book, it is essentially Newtonian
mechanics extended to very high speeds. This information is
expanded from the author's popular Q&A website, a site aimed
primarily at general readers who are curious about how physics
explains the workings of the world. Hence, the answers emphasize
concepts over formalism, and the mathematics is kept to a minimum.
Students new to physics will find discussion and quantitative
calculations for areas often neglected in introductory courses
(e.g. air drag and non-inertial frames).The author gives us a more
intuitive approach to special relativity than normally taught in
introductory courses. One chapter discusses general relativity in a
completely non-mathematical way emphasizing the equivalence
principle and the generalized principle of relativity; the examples
in this chapter can offer a new slant on applications of classical
mechanics. Another chapter is devoted to the physics of computer
games, sci-fi, superheroes, and super weapons for those interested
in the intersection of popular culture and science. Professional
scientists will find topics that they may find amusing and, in some
cases, everyday applications that they had not thought of. Brief
tutorials are given for essential concepts (e.g. Newton's laws) and
appendices give technical details for the interested reader.
He's back! The physicist returns with an entirely new compilation
of questions and answers from his long-lived website where
laypeople can ask questions about anything physics related. This
book focuses on adjectives (practical, beautiful, surprising, cool,
frivolous) instead of nouns like the first two books (atoms,
photons, quanta, mechanics, relativity). The answers within Physics
Is are responses to people looking for answers to fascinating (and
often uninformed) questions. It covers topics such as sports,
electromagnetism, gravitational theory, special relativity,
superheroes, videogames, and science fiction. These books are
designed for laypeople and rely heavily on concepts rather than
formalism. That said, they keep the physics correct and don't water
down, so expert physicists will find this book and its two
companion titles fun reads. They may actually recognize similar
questions posed to them by friends and family. As with the first
two books, Physics Is ends with a chapter with questions from
people who think that 'The physicist' is a psychic and from people
who think they have the answers to life, the universe and
everything.
This is the second book in the "Ask the Physicist" series. The
first book, From Newton to Einstein: Ask the physicist about
mechanics and relativity, provides an excellent foundation for this
book that covers topics in 'modern' physics. The main emphasis of
this volume is providing an accessible introduction to quantum
physics, atomic physics, and nuclear physics to anyone with at
least high-school physics knowledge.
This is the second book in the Ask the Physicist series. The first
book, From Newton to Einstein: Ask the Physicist about Mechanics
and Relativity, provides an excellent foundation for this book that
covers topics in 'modern' physics. The main emphasis of this volume
is providing an accessible introduction to quantum physics, atomic
physics, and nuclear physics to anyone with at least high-school
physics knowledge.
He's back! The physicist returns with an entirely new compilation
of questions and answers from his long-lived website where
laypeople can ask questions about anything physics related. This
book focuses on adjectives (practical, beautiful, surprising, cool,
frivolous) instead of nouns like the first two books (atoms,
photons, quanta, mechanics, relativity). The answers within
'Physics Is' are responses to people looking for answers to
fascinating (and often uninformed) questions. It covers topics such
as sports, electromagnetism, gravitational theory, special
relativity, superheroes, videogames, and science fiction. These
books are designed for laypeople and rely heavily on concepts
rather than formalism. That said, they keep the physics correct and
don't water down, so expert physicists will find this book and its
two companion titles fun reads. They may actually recognize similar
questions posed to them by friends and family. As with the first
two books, 'Physics Is' ends with a chapter with questions from
people who think that 'The physicist' is a psychic and from people
who think they have the answers to life, the universe and
everything.
From Newton to Einstein is a book devoted to classical mechanics.
"Classical" here includes the theory of special relativity as well
because, as argued in the book, it is essentially Newtonian
mechanics extended to very high speeds. This information is
expanded from the author's popular Q&A website, a site aimed
primarily at general readers who are curious about how physics
explains the workings of the world. Hence, the answers emphasize
concepts over formalism, and the mathematics is kept to a minimum.
Students new to physics will find discussion and quantitative
calculations for areas often neglected in introductory courses
(e.g. air drag and non-inertial frames).The author gives us a more
intuitive approach to special relativity than normally taught in
introductory courses. One chapter discusses general relativity in a
completely non-mathematical way emphasizing the equivalence
principle and the generalized principle of relativity; the examples
in this chapter can offer a new slant on applications of classical
mechanics. Another chapter is devoted to the physics of computer
games, sci-fi, superheros, and super weapons for those interested
in the intersection of popular culture and science.Professional
scientists will find topics that they may find amusing and, in some
cases, everyday applications that they had not thought of. Brief
tutorials are given for essential concepts (e.g. Newton's laws) and
appendices give technical details for the interested reader.
In Ten Year Run, Todd Baker unabashedly shared his journey from
couch potato to Olympic torchbearer and marathon finisher. Now, he
confesses his love for the world's scariest and loudest music:
Heavy Metal. Baker wears a tie by day and a Slayer t-shirt by night
and has been a dedicated metal head for 35 years. And he's a really
nice - and funny - guy. In Metal Fatigue, Baker humorously
describes his apprenticeship in the heavy metal trade to explain
how such a decent person can fall in love with such wicked music.
From listening to Black Sabbath for the first time to interviewing
intergalactic warlords as a college radio DJ to failing to properly
execute a stage dive, Baker shares stories of his life in metal
music and how he survived it (mostly) unscathed. Metal Fatigue is a
wry and witty memoir that will charm metal heads and those who just
don't get it. And he offers encouragement for any confused parent
of a kid who loves heavy metal.
In this book, you will read of the continuing Gospel outreaches of
B'rit Hadashah Ministries to the Jewish people in the land of
Israel. The first volume, Messengers of Messiah, chronicled our
earlier outreaches to Israel from 2001 to 2005. This is volume two
of an ongoing series chronicling this ministry's Gospel witnessing
in the Promised Land from 2006 to 2011.
Ten Year Run is a wry memoir of the author's experiences training
for and running in marathons following a life spent largely on the
couch. With a style reminiscent of Bill Bryson, Ten Year Run covers
the first ten years of Baker's running hobby, from his decision to
do something about skyrocketing cholesterol to the successful
completion of four marathons and the honor of carrying the Olympic
Torch. Baker recounts humorous anecdotes from his marathon training
(including mail order fashion disasters), discusses coming to terms
with the absurdity of running the marathon (it's 26 miles, for
crying out loud), shares the sacrifices made (such as the big toe
nail on his right foot), and offers down to earth advice to let you
know that, yes, even you can run a marathon without joining a
running club or spending two months' salary on shoes and wicking
underwear. Ten Year Run provides a humorous look at Baker's
experience in setting a goal to run a marathon, training for the
event, the highs and lows of going the distance, and the decision
to do it again. Punctuated with "The Twelve Noble Truths of
Running" (including, "Hills are steeper than they appear through
the windshield of your car") and the "22 Rules of Running
Marathons" (including Number 19: "Never operate heavy equipment or
attempt algebra after 15 miles"), Ten Year Run will charm both the
serious runner and those with the nagging feeling that they should
put down the pork rinds, turn off the TV, and go for a run.
Matthew chapter 13 is key to correctly understanding the specific
time frame for the Second Coming and establishment of Messiah's
Kingdom on earth and how the course of the present age will unfold
and progress from the first coming of Christ until His return.
Failure to properly understand these parables of Matthew 13 results
in a failure to understand all the rest of the parables Jesus spoke
after them as He so indicated in Luke 4:13. Therefore it behooves
every Bible believing Christian to take serious study of the
unfolding prophetic events of the present age as symbolized in the
eight parables of Matthew 13. This simple exposition is a humble
effort to help the Bible student and reader gain a better
appreciation and understanding of this chapter as it pertains to
those living in the present age as these prophetic parables are
unfolding and being fulfilled right before our very eyes
Suffering and pain affect every human being. They are the results
of evil in our world. The problem of evil is something both
Christian and non-Christian must face and answer. How do we deal
with such unpleasant realities? If there is an all-powerful, all
loving, perfectly good God why is there so much evil? This book
honestly grapples with these and other fundamental questions that
are related to the problem of evil and the existence of God. The
existence of evil is the chief argument traditionally used against
the God of the Bible. The author argues the opposite: that the
existence of evil actually justifies the argument for the existence
of the God of Christianity. The answer proposed in this book is not
one of theory and hypothesis alone, but comes from the historical
life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Through a combined
theodicy (defending the justice of God for allowing evil) of the
cross and resurrection, the case for the Christian faith is
reasonably presented and defended.
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