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Zoom: How Everything Moves, from Atoms and…
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Zoom: How Everything Moves, from Atoms and Galaxies to Blizzards and Bees (2014. Auflage)

von Bob Berman (Autor)

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Describes the natural motion of everything in the universe and explains how the intricate mechanics of the universe does everything from keeping clouds afloat to influencing a home run.
Mitglied:ElSee
Titel:Zoom: How Everything Moves, from Atoms and Galaxies to Blizzards and Bees
Autoren:Bob Berman (Autor)
Info:Oneworld Publications (2014), 336 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
Bewertung:
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Zoom: How Everything Moves: From Atoms and Galaxies to Blizzards and Bees von Bob Berman

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I liked how Berman got into the physics of movements of both really large and really small scales and then came around to the conclusion that much of it is still very much a work in progress that is liable to change, possibly very substantially, as more data is obtained. I have felt this myself at the gut level whan I have contemplated these concepts previously. ( )
  BBrookes | Dec 5, 2023 |
Plus 3/4 star for amount of work this must have been - and less 1/4 star for presentation. It is very interesting but a bit haphazard. I actually enjoyed the notes in some ways best of all. And the mix of Km and Miles seemed a bit annoying and artificial but he does explain that it is an american thing. And he does explain things well despite the jokiness. Not looking to read ny other of his books any time soon. ( )
  Ma_Washigeri | Jan 23, 2021 |
Like Bill Bryson but more American. Tries hard to write witty asides but quips about teenagers not wanting to do house chores and wives not understand nor being interested in science are about as funny as as the author's tenuous grip on science - not very and instead really disappointing. ( )
  Paul_S | Dec 23, 2020 |
In this "pop-science" book, Bob Berman takes a whirl-wind tour around the many phenomena that have to do with motion. He includes interesting stories that span astronomy, geology, biology, meteorology and history. Everything from the exploding universe, runaway poles, magnetic fields, radiation, atoms, snow, ice, tides, tsunami, how clouds stay aloft, earth;s motion, in-tune mosquitoes, wind, air pressure, lightning, thunder, meteors, electricity, sneezes, animals, cells, and much more.

The author explains each phenomenon in an enthusiastic, clear and understandable manner, without bogging the reader down with complicated science. Bob Berman provides a new perspective on old "stuff" and also covers topics not usually covered in popular physics books. Each chapter covers something different, so the reader can dip in and out without getting confused. This book was a joy to read. ( )
  ElentarriLT | Mar 24, 2020 |
Plus 3/4 star for amount of work this must have been - and less 1/4 star for presentation. It is very interesting but a bit haphazard. I actually enjoyed the notes in some ways best of all. And the mix of Km and Miles seemed a bit annoying and artificial but he does explain that it is an american thing. And he does explain things well despite the jokiness. Not looking to read ny other of his books any time soon. ( )
  Ma_Washigeri | May 27, 2018 |
Bob Berman’s entertainingly kinetic book “Zoom” arrives within an electric red cover that ricochets with lightning. A columnist for Astronomy magazine who favors the handle Skyman Bob, he transmits science geekery in vivid prose stuffed with unexpected insights and arresting observations.

“Zoom” examines speeds of all kinds, from the spooky stasis of absolute zero (or 459.67 degrees below zero Fahrenheit, where even atoms stall. “You can’t go any slower than stopped,” Mr. Berman writes), through conventionally fast (a bounding cheetah) and on to superfast, light speed and even beyond — possible because the universe’s ever-accelerating expansion pulls the most distant galaxies away at such a clip that their light stands no chance of ever getting here.

The book’s tour of tempos covers locations and subjects as diverse as the observatories perched on high peaks in Chile’s bone-dry Atacama Desert; the hurricane-force winds of Mount Washington and Mount McKinley; the inner workings of lightning and auroras; and even sap’s variable speed as it rises from root to branch. . . .
hinzugefügt von PLReader | bearbeitenNY Times, Michael Benson (Nov 17, 2014)
 
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Describes the natural motion of everything in the universe and explains how the intricate mechanics of the universe does everything from keeping clouds afloat to influencing a home run.

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