Entertaining Science Experiments with Everyday Objects

Kids, Natural World, Experiments and Projects
Cover of the book Entertaining Science Experiments with Everyday Objects by Martin Gardner, Dover Publications
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Martin Gardner ISBN: 9780486319117
Publisher: Dover Publications Publication: June 10, 2013
Imprint: Dover Publications Language: English
Author: Martin Gardner
ISBN: 9780486319117
Publisher: Dover Publications
Publication: June 10, 2013
Imprint: Dover Publications
Language: English

To Martin Gardner, seeing is not just believing — it is understanding. This fundamental rule has made him one of the most successful teachers and popularizers of science in America. With the simple instructions in this book and a few commonly available household objects, you or your child can easily learn even the most difficult scientific principles by directly experiencing how they work.
Gardner shows you how to re-create classic experiments with easily obtainable objects. Using just a flashlight, a pocket mirror, and a bowl of water, you can demonstrate the color composition of white light just as Newton did 300 years ago. With cardboard, colored paper, and wax paper you can perform "Meyer's experiment" with complementary colors. You need only a playing card, a spool, and a thumbtack to demonstrate Bernoulli's principle of aerodynamics. A soda bottle filled with water, a few paper matches, and a toy balloon elucidate Pascal's law governing pressure in liquids. And two drinking glasses, some matches, and a piece of wet blotting paper re-create a famous experiment, first performed in 1650 in Magdeburg, Germany, that dramatically reveals the force of ordinary atmospheric pressure.
In language simple enough to be easily understood by an 11-year-old, yet technically accurate and informative enough to benefit adults, and aided by Anthony Ravielli's clear illustrations, Gardner presents a splendid practical course in basic science and mathematics. While your child perplexes and delights his or her friends with a series of 100 amusing tricks and experiments, he or she is learning the principles of astronomy, chemistry, physiology, psychology, general mathematics, topology, probability, geometry, numbers, optics (light), gravity, static electricity, mechanics, air hydraulics, thermodynamics (heat), acoustics (sound), and inertia. This is a perfect refresher course for adults as well as an ideal introduction to science for youngsters.
"The experiments … are all clearly explained and unusually well illustrated." — Booklist.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

To Martin Gardner, seeing is not just believing — it is understanding. This fundamental rule has made him one of the most successful teachers and popularizers of science in America. With the simple instructions in this book and a few commonly available household objects, you or your child can easily learn even the most difficult scientific principles by directly experiencing how they work.
Gardner shows you how to re-create classic experiments with easily obtainable objects. Using just a flashlight, a pocket mirror, and a bowl of water, you can demonstrate the color composition of white light just as Newton did 300 years ago. With cardboard, colored paper, and wax paper you can perform "Meyer's experiment" with complementary colors. You need only a playing card, a spool, and a thumbtack to demonstrate Bernoulli's principle of aerodynamics. A soda bottle filled with water, a few paper matches, and a toy balloon elucidate Pascal's law governing pressure in liquids. And two drinking glasses, some matches, and a piece of wet blotting paper re-create a famous experiment, first performed in 1650 in Magdeburg, Germany, that dramatically reveals the force of ordinary atmospheric pressure.
In language simple enough to be easily understood by an 11-year-old, yet technically accurate and informative enough to benefit adults, and aided by Anthony Ravielli's clear illustrations, Gardner presents a splendid practical course in basic science and mathematics. While your child perplexes and delights his or her friends with a series of 100 amusing tricks and experiments, he or she is learning the principles of astronomy, chemistry, physiology, psychology, general mathematics, topology, probability, geometry, numbers, optics (light), gravity, static electricity, mechanics, air hydraulics, thermodynamics (heat), acoustics (sound), and inertia. This is a perfect refresher course for adults as well as an ideal introduction to science for youngsters.
"The experiments … are all clearly explained and unusually well illustrated." — Booklist.

More books from Dover Publications

Cover of the book Sister Carrie by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book Contemporary Designs for Glass Etching by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book Anarchism and Other Essays by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book A Shakespearian Grammar by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book Italian Picture Word Book by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book The Adventures of Uncle Lubin by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book The Complete Book of Birdhouse Construction for Woodworkers by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book Flaxman's Illustrations for Dante's Divine Comedy by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book Imagist Poetry by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book One Hundred Problems in Elementary Mathematics by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book One Two Three . . . Infinity by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book Swing Low, Swing Death by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book Adventures in Mathematical Reasoning by Martin Gardner
Cover of the book Vector and Tensor Analysis with Applications by Martin Gardner
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy