MIT Professor Walter Lewin, Physics, Classical Mechanics, Lecture No. 07: Weight and Weightlessness
This lecture explores weight, perceived gravity, weightlessness, free fall, zero perceived gravity in orbit.
via Yovisto / Osotis
MIT Professor Walter Lewin, Physics, Classical Mechanics, Lecture No. 08: Friction
This lecture deals exclusively with frictional forces.
Prof. Lewin demonstrates a strange experiment, where a flea is moving a thick book.
via Yovisto / Osotis
If a perfectly diffuse, perfectly reflecting surface has one foot-candle (one lumen per square foot) of illumination falling on it, its luminance is one foot-Lambert or 1/pi candles per square foot.
There are generally two types of science: first, there’s the type that makes computers work, allows us to ride around in metal boxes propelled by continuous explosion, and makes it so that milk doesn’t taste all gross. Then there’s the fringe science, the stuff that shoots up your nose like mathematical horseradish and dances a jig on your brain
H. Möller. Wege in der Physikdidaktik: Anregungen für Unterricht und Lehre, Volume 5 von Wege in der Physikdidaktik / Arbeitskreis Bayerischer Physikdidaktiker, Palm & Enke, Erlangen und Jena, (2002)
P. Volyan''ski. Combustion, Explosion, and Shock Waves, 20 (5):
500-506(September 1984)Translated from Fizika Goreniya i Vzryva, Vol. 20, No. 5, pp. 29–35,
September–October, 1984..
D. Dolce. chapter 4 in "Beyond Peaceful Coexistence The Emergence of Space, Time and Quantum", IMPERIAL COLLEGE PRESS (2016), (2017)cite arxiv:1707.00677Comment: Revised version of the published chapter 4 in "Beyond Peaceful Coexistence The Emergence of Space, Time and Quantum", IMPERIAL COLLEGE PRESS (2016).
R. Bondesan, und A. Lamacraft. (2019)cite arxiv:1906.04645Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. Presented at the ICML 2019 Workshop on Theoretical Physics for Deep Learning.