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    The Physics of Superheroes

    The Physics of Superheroes

    4.7 26

    by James Kakalios


    eBook

    $6.99
    $6.99

    Customer Reviews

      ISBN-13: 9781101216736
    • Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
    • Publication date: 09/29/2005
    • Sold by: Penguin Group
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 384
    • File size: 2 MB
    • Age Range: 18 Years

    James Kakalios is a professor in the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Minnesota, where he has taught since 1988, and where his class "Everything I Needed to Know About Physics I Learned from Reading Comic Books" is a popular freshman seminar. He received his Ph.D. in 1985 from the University of Chicago, and has been reading comic books for much longer.

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    James Kakalios explores the scientific plausibility of the powers and feats of the most famous superheroes — and discovers that in many cases the comic writers got their science surprisingly right. Along the way he provides an engaging and witty commentary while introducing the lay reader to both classic and cutting-edge concepts in physics, including:

    • What Superman’s strength can tell us about the Newtonian physics of force, mass, and acceleration
    • How Iceman’s and Storm’s powers illustrate the principles of thermal dynamics
    • The physics behind the death of Spider-Man’s girlfriend Gwen Stacy
    • Why physics professors gone bad are the most dangerous evil geniuses!

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    Who among us hasn't wondered whether a real Superman could "leap tall buildings in a single bound" or whether the X-Men's Storm could possibly control the world's weather? The Physics of Superheroes is designed to put all those chat room speculations to rest. James Kakalios has authentic credentials to answer these questions: He's not just a comic book geek; he's a professor of physics at the University of Minnesota and the author of Everything I Needed to Know About Physics I Learned from Reading Comic Books. Knowledge more powerful than a locomotive.
    Publishers Weekly
    This terrific book demonstrates a number of important points. First, a subject that everyone "knows" is difficult and boring can, in the hands of a master teacher, be both exciting and fun. Second, it's a myth that only people particularly adept at mathematics can understand and enjoy physics. Third, superhero comic books have socially redeeming qualities. By combining his love for physics with his love of comic books, University of Minnesota physicist Kakalios has written a book for the general reader covering all of the basic points in a first-level college physics course and is difficult to put down. Among many other things, Kakalios uses the basic laws of physics to "prove" that gravity must have been 15 times greater on Krypton than on Earth; that Spiderman's girlfriend, Gwen Stacy, died because his webbing stopped her too abruptly after she plunged from the George Washington Bridge; and that when the Flash runs, he's surrounded by a pocket of air that enables him to breathe. Kakalios draws on the Atom, Iron Man, X-Men, the Ant-Man and the Hulk, among many others, to cover topics as diverse as electromagnetism, quantum mechanics, string theory and thermodynamics. That all of this is accomplished with enough humor to make you laugh aloud is an added bonus. B&w illus. Agent, Jay Mandel. (Oct.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
    Library Journal
    Bam! Pow! Kakalios (physics, Univ. of Minnesota) delivers a one-two punch: real science and good fun. Does "leaping tall buildings in a single bound" have anything to do with Newton's three laws of motion? You bet, and Kakalios explains the connection in his lively, humorous style. He looks at momentum, friction, special relativity, properties of matter, light, magnetism, atomic physics, quantum mechanics, and solid-state physics as demonstrated by his favorite comic book heroes-including Superman, Flash, and the Invisible Woman-and shows that much of the time, comic book physics is accurate (though he exposes the bloopers, too). The book's a treat for anyone interested in physical science and can be enjoyed readily by math phobes and those with little science education, since Kakalios explains it all with clear detail and a good measure of fun. Highly recommended for small academic libraries and the science collections of public libraries of all sizes. [Popular science buffs may also enjoy Laurence Krauss's The Physics of Star Trek and Barry Parker's forthcoming Death Rays, Jet Packs, Stunts & Supercars: The Fantastic Physics of Film's Most Celebrated Secret Agent (Johns Hopkins, Nov.).-Ed.]-Denise Dayton, Jaffrey Grade Sch., NH Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
    Kirkus Reviews
    How do you teach someone physics? Relate it to the life of a superhero. Kakalios (Physics/Univ. of Minnesota) uses comic books in the classroom to illustrate the principles of physics. He notes early on in this approachable primer that the most common question from physics students is, "When am I ever going to use this stuff in real life?" He adds that when he incorporates superhero comics into lessons, students "never wonder when they will use this information in 'real life.' " Kakalios draws examples from the so-called "Silver Age" of comics, which ran from approximately 1956 to 1973. He sticks for the most part to the better known heroes like The Flash, the X-Men, Spider-Man and, of course, Superman. The scientific scenarios are often complex, though the author does his best to break them down for the layman, discussing, for example, how much energy The Flash needs to run, and calculating how many cheeseburgers would be required to keep him moving. One of the book's better sections deals with what actually happened in one of comics' most-discussed tragedies: the death of Spider-Man's love, Gwen Stacy, dropped from a great height by the Green Goblin and saved from impact by Spidey, who finds that "the fall" had already killed her. Kakalios shows that it wasn't the fall that did it but velocity (stopping someone abruptly with a web would probably break his neck). With passion, genial affability and a penchant for bad (truly bad) jokes, Kakalios ably relates the most baffling of theorems. If only he had done more with Batman. A book that mixes pop culture and science without drawing lines between the two.

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