A Kitchen Course in Electricity and Magnetism [electronic resource] / by David Nightingale, Christopher Spencer
- Author
- Nightingale, David
- Published
- Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2015.
- Physical Description
- XII, 179 pages 164 illustrations, 127 illustrations in color : online resource
- Additional Creators
- Spencer, Christopher and SpringerLink (Online service)
Access Online
- Contents
- Part 1 Home Electrostatics -- Background -- Kitchen experiments with static electricity -- Part 2 Current & Voltage -- Water analogy -- Galvani’s frogs’ legs -- Part 3 Magnetism -- Lodestones -- Further view of magnetism -- Part 4 Transistors -- Re-visit the diode -- The pn junction -- Experiment – diode graph.
- Summary
- This book will show you how to build a battery, detect static electricity, and construct a basic current meter, all using common items from your kitchen. Along the way, you'll learn about the meaning of "voltage" and "current," what makes an LED work, and the difference between AC and DC. The last chapter uses transistors -- the basic building blocks of every computer -- for lots of interesting experiments. With plenty of colorful illustrations, historical stories, and an easy, accessible style, A Kitchen Course in Electricity and Magnetism will be a great start for budding and amateur scientists who want to learn more about how the world works.
- Subject(s)
- ISBN
- 9783319053059
- Digital File Characteristics
- text file PDF
- Note
- AVAILABLE ONLINE TO AUTHORIZED PSU USERS.
- Part Of
- Springer eBooks
View MARC record | catkey: 14085689