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Cargando... El breviario del seǫr Tompkinspor George Gamow
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. NA George Gamow (during his "three decade vacation" in the USA) wrote a number of articles and books featuring Mr. Tompkins, a bank clerk with an especially easily influenced dream-life. The dreams have a funny way of becoming stories and adventures that explain features of fundamental physics and cosmology (as of the 1960s). Many of the illustrations are also by Gamow. A foreword to this edition by Roger Penrose indicates where theory has moved on since Gamow's time and the few, slight inaccuracies in the description of Relativity. Mr. Tompkins' adventures are charming - delightful, in fact, though they show signs of the time/culture they were written in. The appearances by Father Paulini (Pauli) and Maxwell's Demon (dressed as a Butler but never without his tennis-racquet) are particular fun for me. No-one would consider writing a popular science book via this approach these days and so this will remain a unique classic of the genre. Strongly recommended to everyone just for the fun of it. You might learn something along the way but nevermind if you don't - just wait for the bit where Tompkins turns into an electron! This is a very readable and amusing book on relativity, the universe, quantum theory, and atomic structure. It is based around the adventures of a character called Mr Tompkins, who is interested in learning more about physics. He attends lectures on physics, in which he often falls asleep, and then experiences the physical phenomena (such as space time dilation, quantum coherence, particle annihilation et cetera) on a scale that is directly observable, during dreams. This book is non-technical, and written for a general audience, and though there are a few equations, to completely understand them is not essential. The book does a good job of making difficult concepts easy to understand partly by scaling them up to every day life, and partly by involving the character in them (such as when he is changed into an electron). The illustrations are also good, and fit the light-hearted nature of the stories. The separate parts that make up this book were originally published 50 to 60 years ago, so some of the things on elementary particles are a bit out of date, and a small amount of progress has been made in quantum physics, but the stuff on the universe and relativity still holds up well. There are other books that do just as good a job of explaining some of these concepts (A Brief History of Time, for example), but the way that Gamow writes is at times hilarious, and I think worth reading this for in itself. Changing the conditions of the real world in order to demonstrate the effect of scientific principles has been a traditional tool since Flatland by Edwin Abbott Abbott. I have to disagree with the other reviewers and say that this book taught me to understand relativity, which only became less clear when reading Stephen Hawking. This is a book of its time in the same way as Flatland is a book of its time, the language and style of both have dated, but the underlying metaphors and explanations in both remain clear. Stephen, though undoubtedly clever, remains dense and unclear. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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Ameno breviario dedicado a develar en un tono incluso humor stico y de cuento los principios operativos de la f sica moderna. Los ensayos aqu expuestos ponen al alcance del lector los fen menos de la fisi n y la fusi n at micas, el comportamiento de las part culas elementales de la materia y las leyes que rigen el funcionamiento del cosmos. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)539Natural sciences and mathematics Physics Matter; Molecular Physics; Atomic and Nuclear physics; Radiation; Quantum PhysicsClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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