Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts

Monday, August 20, 2007

Water Science Fair Projects: Using Ice Cubes, Super Soakers, and Other Wet Stuff



Water Science Fair Projects: Using Ice Cubes, Super Soakers, and Other Wet Stuff
Enslow Publishers | ISBN: 0766021246 | February 2004 | 128 pages | PDF | 1.8 MB

Provides experiments appropriate for science fair projects that demonstrate the properties of water. The structure of water -- The three states of matter of water -- Surface tension, adhesion, and cohesion of liquid water -- Chemical properties of water.

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Chemistry Science Fair Projects: Using Acids, Bases, Metals, Salts, and Inorganic Stuff



Chemistry Science Fair Projects: Using Acids, Bases, Metals, Salts, and Inorganic Stuff
Enslow Publishers | ISBN: 0766022102 | September 2004 | 128 pages | PDF | 1.8 MB

From School Library Journal
Grade 7 Up - An introduction offers a short explanation of inorganic chemistry and then discusses the materials required for the more than 25 experiments presented. Since many of the items are not likely to be found in the home, readers are provided with a list of supply companies. Readers are also encouraged to call upon their science teachers and utilize school equipment, such as Bunsen burners, graduated cylinders, rubber tubing, manganese dioxide, potassium iodide, and various sizes of flasks. Students are encouraged to expand on the ideas in order to create unique projects of their own. A brief explanation of the scientific method and a discussion of safety are included. The information is dry but includes bits of intriguing historical documentation. The text is clear and concise and includes many questions to be considered for further research. Simple black-and-white illustrations accompany the text. A solid addition to any collection. - Maren Ostergard, Bellevue Regional Library, WA

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Chemistry Science Fair Projects Using French Fries, Gumdrops, Soap, and Other Organic Stuff



Chemistry Science Fair Projects Using French Fries, Gumdrops, Soap, and Other Organic Stuff
Enslow Publishers | ISBN: 0766022110 | October 2004 | 128 pages | PDF | 1.2 MB

From School Library Journal
Grade 7 Up–This book opens with a simple explanation of organic chemistry and a discussion of the various materials that are needed for the projects that follow. Students are encouraged to build upon the 29 experiments presented and to develop their own inquiries. Ideas for further experimentation and a thorough discussion of safety rules and advice are included. The experiments become more complex as the book progresses. Some of them require materials available only from a school laboratory or a science supply company (a list is appended), such as maleic and fumaric acids and copper sulfate crystals. Simple black-and-white drawings complement the text, and illustrations of chemical structures help to demonstrate reactions. A sound addition to science collections.–Maren Ostergard, Bellevue Regional Library, WA

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What's Science Ever Done For Us: What the Simpsons Can Teach Us About Physics, Robots, Life, and the Universe



What's Science Ever Done For Us: What the Simpsons Can Teach Us About Physics, Robots, Life, and the Universe
Paul Halpern | Wiley | ISBN: 0470114606 | July 9, 2007 | 272 pages | PDF | 1 MB

Is the universe shaped like a donut? Homer proposed such a theory. Do three-eyed fish swim near nuclear power plants? Bart managed to catch one. Are perpetual-motion machines suitable for school projects? Lisa constructed a working model. The Simpsons®, the world's most popular and longest-running animated series, is a treasure-trove of scientific ideas and a clever mixture of fact and fancy. Now there's a guide to the science behind the show. In What's Science Ever Done for Us? you'll find answers to an amazing array of scientific questions raised in 26 classic episodes. Whether you're a Simpsons fan, a science buff, or both, get ready to laugh and learn as Homer, Bart, Marge, Lisa, and the entire town of Springfield prove that science isn't just fun—it's hilarious!

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Sunday, August 5, 2007

Reed, Simon - Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics, Vol. 3: Scattering Theory



Michael Reed, Barry Simon, "Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics, Vol. 3: Scattering Theory"
Academic Press | ISBN 0125850034 | Year 1979 | 463 pages | DjVu | 7.1 MB

Scattering theory is the study of an interacting system on a scale of time and/or distance which is large compared to the scale of the interaction itself. As such, it is the most effective means, sometimes the only means, to study microscopic nature. To understand the importance of scattering theory, consider the variety of ways in which it arises. First, there are various phenomena in nature (like the blue of the sky) which are the result of scattering. In order to understand the phenomenon (and to identify it as the result of scattering) one must understand the underlying dynamics and its scattering theory. Second, one often wants to use the scattering of waves or particles whose dynamics on knows to determine the structure and position of small or inaccessible objects. For example, in x-ray crystallography (which led to the discovery of DNA), tomography, and the detection of underwater objects by sonar, the underlying dynamics is well understood. What one would like to construct are correspondences that link, via the dynamics, the position, shape, and internal structure of the object to the scattering data. Ideally, the correspondence should be an explicit formula which allows one to reconstruct, at least approximately, the object from the scattering data. The main test of any proposed particle dynamics is whether one can construct for the dynamics a scattering theory that predicts the observed experimental data. Scattering theory was not always so central the physics. Even thought the Coulomb cross section could have been computed by Newton, had he bothered to ask the right question, its calculation is generally attributed to Rutherford more than two hundred years later. Of course, Rutherford's calculation was in connection with the first experiment in nuclear physics.

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Reed, Simon - Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics, Vol. 2: Fourier Analysis, Self-Adjointness



Michael Reed, Barry Simon, "Methods of Modern Mathematical Physics, Vol. 2: Fourier Analysis, Self-Adjointness"
Academic Press | ISBN 0125850026 | Year 1975 | 361 pages | DjVu | 3.4 MB


This volume will serve several purposes: to provide an introduction for graduate students not previously acquainted with the material, to serve as a reference for mathematical physicists already working in the field, and to provide an introduction to various advanced topics which are difficult to understand in the literature. Not all the techniques and application are treated in the same depth. In general, we give a very thorough discussion of the mathematical techniques and applications in quatum mechanics, but provide only an introduction to the problems arising in quantum field theory, classical mechanics, and partial differential equations. Finally, some of the material developed in this volume will not find applications until Volume III. For all these reasons, this volume contains a great variety of subject matter. To help the reader select which material is important for him, we have provided a "Reader's Guide" at the end of each chapter.

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Friday, August 3, 2007

Einstein A to Z




Karen C. Fox, Einstein A to Z
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. | ISBN 0471466743 | 2004 | PDF | 3.30 MB | 321 pages

Tackling a human life in alphabetical order is a fascinating task. Instead of a continuous story that includes highs and lows, descriptions of a personality with both strengths and weaknesses, a tale of triumphs coupled with failures, an encyclopedia spotlights a single topic to the exclusion of others. Every aspect of the subject’s life is presented starkly and without mitigating factors. Most important, you will learn that the contradictions of Einstein’s life could not obscure his contributions. His theories, one more elegant than the last, nourished and created the very foundation for twentiethcentury science.

Ultimately, as we wrote this book, we realized that Einstein quite simply was all his contradictions simultaneously: stubborn, brilliant, modest, self-centered, generous, passionate. A biography presented in bite-size entries, as this book is, offers the chance to see the truth behind an icon in a way that is rarely possible.

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