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This Strange Quantum World & You |  | Author: Patricia Topp Publisher: Blue Dolphin Publishing, Inc Category: Book
List Price: $10.00 Buy New: $5.30 as of 7/29/2010 15:25 EDT details You Save: $4.70 (47%)
New (14) Used (11) from $3.64
Seller: thermite-media Rating: 5 reviews
Media: Paperback Edition: Second Printing Reading Level: Ages 9-12 Pages: 60 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.3 x 0.2
ISBN: 1577330358 Dewey Decimal Number: 539.7 EAN: 9781577330356
Publication Date: August 18, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This Strange Quantum World and You is a book for those from 9 to 90 who wish to gain some understanding of this quantum world. This smaller-than-an-atom world can't be seen, but there are ways to gain insight into its workings. This book is geared toward children and provides a few simple experiments that explain how energy and matter work. It also shows how energy and matter are two different states of the same thing. Learning how information is carred at faster than lightning speeds suggests the conclusion that we are all connected in some way. This leads children to a feeling of belonging. It also illustrates the necessity of watching how we think, speak, and act, so that we do a more responsible job of caring for our Earth and for each other. "We are, each and every one of us, woven into a great 3-D web of vibrating energies. We are within it, and it is within us. The most unusual thing about this web of energy is that it seems to be conscious like we are. It is able to exchange information within all its parts like we do within our bodies."
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| Customer Reviews: Making something complicated extraordinarily simple July 12, 2001 Prof. K (San Francisco, CA USA) 28 out of 28 found this review helpful
Ms.Topp's short book should be on the book list of every 5th grade science teacher, 10 year old kid in love with science and mystery and adult who wishes to understand quantum physics or just the science behind the plot of Michael Crichton book "Timeline". She explains in incredible clear, developmental appropriate language how the world can seem solid yet is really light and energy,and how this is relevant in the world of kids and leading-edge physicist alike. Just 53 pages later adult and child alike will have a "A HA" explanation of why things can happen simultaneously and be related. Elegantly simple yet profoundly rewarding to read.
Understand the basics of quantum physics in an afternoon December 17, 2007 futurewriter (Utah) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
As an adult reading this book, easy enough for children to understand, I absolutely loved it! The basic concepts of quantum physics is explained in fun and easy-to-follow formats with examples and experiments for you to try. This book has definitely perked my interest in physics and I intend to find similar books to learn more. I borrowed this book from my local library, but now intend to buy it so that my children can read it and we can discuss the experiments suggested in the book. I think this book will inspire children and adults to learn more about the world we live in. I read this book in an afternoon. It is easy, fun, and interesting reading, and only 53 pages of larger print writing with many diagrams.
Brand new to quantum physics? This is for you! April 18, 2008 Shannon Wilcox (The heart of Oklahoma) 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
Curious minds want to know! This very complex subject is made ridiculously easy to grasp by the author who seems to be writing for children, albeit smart children. Fascinating concepts are built upon each other in a very readable, understandable way. There are simple illustations that complement many concepts as well. As I read this book I would get so excited I would stop and share what I had just read with my husband. Mind boggling yet illuminating. I actually think I can wrap my brain around the Theory of Everything now by understanding bosons and Colossians 1:17!
Strange Quantum World May 28, 2010 F. Murden This book really helped my sixth grader gain a better understanding of Quantum Physics. After reading the book and trying some of the experiments she was really able to present her research information well.
New Age Religion Masquerading as Science June 18, 2010 well-buzzed (Boston, USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
First, the cover should be a tip-off: Two (seemingly) Native Americans hailing a spider web with a star in the middle.
The first few chapters on background material are passable (the chapter on light is good as well as the one on particles/waves) and the comparison of cars crashing into each other should be fairly accessible to students. But then the wackiness begins and New Age religion starts to push actual science to the side.
It starts almost innocuously with a mention of sending out vibes and sensing good energy and quickly goes downhill from there. By the time the book is done, it claims that "messages can travel faster than the speed of light because they somehow travel in thoughts" (?), that the universe seems to be conscious, and that we must be careful about what we create with our thoughts.
The wackiness reaches the apex (or should that be nadir) when the book discusses Bose-Einstein condensates. According to the book, scientist believe that the "universe is the most powerful Bose-Einstein condensate" (no, they don't), and "some scientists believe that we are conscious because our minds act like Bose-Einstein condensates" (I suppose that's true in the same sense that "some scientists" believe that unicorns and leprechauns actually exist). The biggest howler comes from an experiment where one strokes a nail with a magnet. To quote the book: "You have made a (not very strong) Bose-Einstein condensate." Wow. This falls under the category of "not even wrong."
As for the experiments, they involve (among other household items) jump ropes, a button on a string, paper cup and string phones, and the aforementioned magnet and nail. They range from kind-of-helpful, to the irrelevant, to the "let's make a Bose-Einstein condensate!"
It might make a decent pamphlet if you tore out all of the pages after 21, but the misinformation and New Age interpretation that follows make this book, on the whole, unacceptable as a book on science.
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