Physics Gossips: Q&A Sparking Scientific Curiosity and Secular Wonder
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Narrated by:
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Virtual Voice
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By:
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Mark Steinberg
This title uses virtual voice narration
Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.
This book features 100 humorous problems/questions that do not require calculations but instead rely on a basic understanding of fundamental physical laws and a good sense of humor. Discussing physical phenomena in a light-hearted manner can be very beneficial. The book is particularly useful for parents who want to spend quality time with their children, engaging them in scientific discussions. The answers follow immediately after the problems, presented in a similarly humorous style.
For a sample:
Question: If you grab Mike and give him a good shake, you’ll witness a powerful cascade from his pockets: pebbles, coins, tiny Vex components, and gum—both new and chewed, wrapped in wrappers. Mike had a rough experience with sticky pockets, so he wraps his chewed gum in wrappers. What’s the reason for this surprising cascade phenomenon?
Answer: The reason all the stuff flies out of Mike’s pockets when you shake him is due to inertia. Inertia is a property of matter that causes objects to resist changes in their state of motion. When you shake Mike, his body moves, but the items in his pockets tend to stay in place due to inertia, causing them to fly out. And that was the moment of truth; it became clear why the VEX robot's arm fell off during the competition—thanks to Mike's bottomless pockets.
Of course, some leading scientists might grumble when they find rather crude assumptions and not entirely accurate statements in our problem book.
The problems offer an opportunity to smile and break away from the stereotype that physics is a dull subject for scientists and has no practical use in everyday life.
Physics is all around us; we are physics, and everyone should know its basics.
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