Deliver to KUWAIT
IFor best experience Get the App
The Great Physicists from Galileo to Einstein (Biography of Physics)
D**D
Many erros, it seems
I haven't read the entire book yet. But just in selecting a few pages, I've already detected simple errors that should not occur. Fig. I-1 is clearly in error and when I have the time I'll sort it out completely. And on page 139, the equation for the "resistance of wire" is wrong. The resistance of a wire is proportional to the length of the wire and inversely proportional to the cross-sectional area. I'll sort this out later to find out what is really meant. This is distressing since I've glanced at only a few pages yet already found two errors. I hope to do better as I read the entire text.
R**S
Knitting together great ingenuity unveiling nature's workings
We are in 1959, Gamow is introducing us to some of the greatest REBELS civilization managed to build and deploy. Let us look again at the title: from Galileo (1564-1642) to Einstein (1879-1955). This is a vast range of ingenuity and competence challenging the state-of-the-art by thinking about nature freely. But this book starts with the inquisition making Galileo confirm that our planet does not move and it is the center of the universe. From there, this book becomes a thrilling adventure unveiling nature. The team includes Kepler, Fraunhofer, Faraday, Hertz, Maxwell, Lorentz, Michelson-Morley, Bohr, Heisenberg, Plank, ... and Dirac. Gamow is great knitting great people together. And his goal is to motivate YOU to join them.
A**G
About geniuses by a genius
We live in the early stages of the big bang of scientific knowledge, and this book is an account of that big bang itself. Now, many people can tell stories, but rare is the combination of a master storyteller with a world-class physicist. Gamow is such a rarity. Known sometimes as the ordinary genius (see book: Ordinary Geniuses) he interacted with the extraordinary geniuses of his time, but more importantly he had the intellectual capacity to understand those extraordinary geniuses whose stories he tells in this book.
P**U
A great introduction to Physics and physicists, by one of them
After reading Mr.Thompkins in Wonderland in my tender youth, far back, this was the most enlightening introduction to Physics and physicists I ever came across with. Gamow was a fantastic story teller, imaginative but precise. His hand drawn illustrations, that greatly enrich the two books, are both naive and powerful. The same with the lively personal stories and anedoctes involving the great physicists of all times, including many of the first half of the past century, many of whom he knew personaly, on friendly terms.He was also one of them, on scientific stature.I often come back to Gamow, to refresh some of my memories, as if I had the privilege of possessing an immortal grandfather.
R**I
Great book
Awesome history of physics along with the actual subject matter. I love George Gamow and his writing style. He brings new insight to the subject even if you already know your physics.
D**Z
Gift
Purchased as a gift.
A**E
Another great text by Gamow
Gamow has long be revered as one of the original science "popularizers"--mostly because of his lucid and well trimmed writing style. This book is no different and it has the added bonus that Gamow actually knew most of the modern physicists--starting with Einstein--personally. It is worth buying for the great "kayak problem" in the relativity chapter alone, but has a wide range of different interesting tidbits, biographical information, and of course physics in Gamow's distinctive way. Well worth a read, especially for only $10.
C**M
Very Informative!
This book contained everything you could wish to know concerning just about every physicist that has had a major scientific contribution. This is a great book for intermediate scientific readers. I also liked that it had diagrams especially drawn by the author himself.
A**R
Spoiled by howlers!
There are many gems in this book, and better explanations of many phenomena than my physics teacher gave!But it is spoiled by several howlers that I cannot believe came from such an eminent physisyst's pen. Giving Newton's explanation of how the sun causes our tides, without pointing out that we now know it is the moon, is not typical; there are several missing signs of exponents, giving bizarre results; and as for 3 million plus 1/2 being the same as 31/2 million, that would receive a detention!Is this just a clumsy Kindle reproduction, or do Dover Books just not bother with proof reading?
M**G
Great Physicists
Fantastic introduction to classical physics and the beginning of the quantum revolution, with enough technical stuff to be interesting but not overwhelming. There is also good stuff on early physics, Archimedes. Recommended.
L**Z
Un texto ameno con explicaciones claras de hechos fundamentales de la historia de la física
Soy un lector que disfruta del estilo, humor, dibujos y sobre todo de las excelentes explicaciones de G. Gamov acerca de cuestiones de física, desde las más sencillas a las más complejas, siempre explicadas con un estilo claro y ameno. Sin duda alguna el primer gran divulgador científico. Pero además, de ser un excelente divulgador, fue partícipe del gran edificio de la ciencia, contribuyendo de forma significativa desde la mecánica cuántica a la astrofísica (radiación de fondo) y pasando por la codificación presente en la doble hélice del ADN. Así que uno no está leyendo a un divulgador que relata capítulos importantes de la historia de la física si no que su implicación en la misma le confiere a sus escritos un valor añadido. Aunque sus textos están inevitablemente desfasados debido a que son de los años 60, siempre te sorprenden y te hacen disfrutar y amar la física y respetar el trabajo de los grandes científicos.
J**A
Estupendo
Fama muy justificada
V**H
No heading
Good
Trustpilot
2 days ago
1 month ago