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The Science of Spin: How Rotational Forces Affect Everything from Your Body to Jet Engines to the Weather
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12/99
Critics
17/99
Readers
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Scholars
10/99
Rating
15/99
Volume
23/99
Rating
11/99
Volume
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About This Book
From the masterful author of The Age of Wood , a "fascinating" ( The Wall Street Journal ), "original and highly engaging insight into how our universe works, encompassing black holes, the cotton mills of the industrial revolution, the biomechanics of walking, and more" (Paul Sen, author of Einstein's Fridge ). From the time humans first used rotating bobbins to twist thread or whirled slings around their heads to throw stones, people have found spin fascinating and baffling in equal measure. Now, in The Science of Spin , Roland Ennos shows how rotational motion dominates the workings of the world around us. It has shaped the solar system, galaxies, and black holes. It controls our climate and weather—from the pattern of trade winds to the local formation of hurricanes and tornadoes. Harnessing the power of spin helped launch civilization, from the first developments of the wheel to the systems that now add force the industrial world—propellers, turbines, centrifugal pumps, electric motors, and computer disk drives. Even our own bodies are complex systems of rotating joints and levers. Yet scientists tend to ignore the simple and straightforward. So, in the 17th-century they developed the science of mechanics to explain the phenomenon of the orbit of the planets rather than how machines work. But few people realize how spin makes our planet habitable, or how it has been tamed by engineers to make our lives more comfortable. With "lucid and clear" (Mark Miodownik, author of Stuff Matters ) explanations, Ennos presents a new approach to mechanics that not only helps us better understand the world, but also reveals unlikely links between tightrope walkers and tyrannosaurs, catapults and tennis players, stunt cars and long jumpers. He shows us that by opening our minds, we can all learn to move about more gracefully, play sports more successfully and safely—and ensure that, like cats, be sure to always land on our feet. "There's plenty to ponder" ( Kirkus Reviews ) in this highly entertaining and informative read demonstrating that, whether it be natural or engineered, spin is what really makes the world go round.
Preview
Reviews
"The Science of Spin moves too fast to spend much time getting to know the people behind the story."
"Although generous with charts and pictures, inevitably, most of his explanations require words, and readers with no scientific background may struggle to understand his written descriptions of high- and low-pressure turbines or how humans keep their balance."
"The author's account of how the invention of the flying shuttle in 1732 improved the productivity of looms will be lost on anyone who isn't intimately familiar with the machines ..."
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