Demonstrating science with soap films

著者

書誌事項

Demonstrating science with soap films

David R. Lovett ; computer programs, John Tilley and David Lovett

Institute of Physics Pub., c1994

  • pbk.

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 12

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p.192-195) and index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

pbk. ISBN 9780750302692

内容説明

Many of us have been fascinated as children by soap bubbles and soap films. Their shapes and colours are beautiful and they are great fun to pay with. With no les intensity, scientists and mathematicians have been interested in the properties of bubbles and films throughout scientific history. In this book David Lovett describes the properties of soap films and soap bubbles. He then uses their properties to illustrate and elucidate a wide range of physical principles and scientific phenomena in a way that unifies different concepts. The book will appeal not only to students and teachers at school and university but also to readers with a general scientific interest and to researchers studying soap films. For the most part simple school mathematics is used. Sections containing more advanced mathematics have been placed in boxes or appendices and can be omitted by readers without the appropriate mathematical background. The text is supported with * Over 100 diagrams and photgraphs. * Details of practical experiments that can be performed using simple household materials. * Computer programs that draw some of the more complicated figures or animate sequences of soap film configurations. * A bibliography for readers wishing to delve further into the subject. David Lovett is a lecturer in physics at the University of Essex. His research interests include Langmiur-Blodgett thin films and the use of models as teaching aids in physics. He has been interested in soap films since 1978 and has made a number of original contributions to the subject, particularly in the use of models which change their dimensions and their analogy with phase transitions. He has published three other books including ITensor Properties of Crystals (Institute of Physics Publishing 1989). John Tilley is also a lecturer in physics at the University of Essex with research interests in theoretical solid-state physics and soap films. He is coauthor of Superfluidity and Superconductivity (Institute of Physics Publishing, 3rd edition, 1990).

目次

Introduction. Two-dimensional soap-film patterns. Soap films and first- and second-order phase transitions. Soap-film models and catastrophe models. Film within a wedge - the catenoidal surface. Soap films within three-dimensional frameworks and minimal surfaces. Fermat's principle and refraction. Bubbles. Analogies within the scientific world. Appendices. Bibliography. Index.
巻冊次

ISBN 9780750302708

内容説明

This text attempts to pass on some of the fun which can be obtained from studying soap films and soap bubbles. At the same time, it has a much more serious objective, that of using films to help readers to understand the principles of physics in particular and other aspects of science in general. This book is not only about soap films, but also about the importance of energy minimization to the establishment of the world around us, and the patterns that are set up as a result of this minimization. In most topics in the physical sciences, it is difficult to avoid mathematics. The study of soap films is no exception, and simple calculations and algebraic equations have been dispersed throughout this book. Where the account of mathematics is more significant, the relevant section of text is boxed and can be ignored by the reader, if desired.

目次

  • Two-dimensional soap film patterns
  • soap films and first-and second-order phase transitions
  • soap-film models and catastrophe models
  • film within a wedge - the catenoidal surface
  • soap films within three-dimensional frameworks and minimal surfaces
  • Fermat's principle and refraction
  • bubbles
  • analogies within the scientific world.

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