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The life and science of Léon Foucault, the man who proved the earth rotates

Autor William Tobin

Editorial CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

The life and science of Léon Foucault, the man who proved the earth rotates
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"In 1851 a young French physicist erected a giant pendulum in the heart of Paris and showed astonished spectators that the Earth was turning beneath their feet. Pendulum mania swept the learned and everyday worlds and Leon Foucault's name became syno...

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  • Editorial CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780521808552
  • ISBN10 0521808553
  • Tipo LIBRO
  • Páginas 338
  • Año de Edición 2003
  • Encuadernación Tela

The life and science of Léon Foucault, the man who proved the earth rotates

Autor William Tobin

Editorial CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

"In 1851 a young French physicist erected a giant pendulum in the heart of Paris and showed astonished spectators that the Earth was turning beneath their feet. Pendulum mania swept the learned and everyday worlds and Leon Foucault's name became syno...

-5% dto.    81,11€
77,05€
Ahorra 4,06€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

"In 1851 a young French physicist erected a giant pendulum in the heart of Paris and showed astonished spectators that the Earth was turning beneath their feet. Pendulum mania swept the learned and everyday worlds and Leon Foucault's name became synonymous with his famous pendulum. The demonstration continues to captivate a century and a half later." The history and interpretation of the pendulum experiment are described in terms suitable for the general reader in this abundantly illustrated biography of Foucault. His contributions to science went well beyond the pendulum, however: most notably to the gyroscope, to decisive laboratory measurements of the speed of light, and to the invention of the telescope in its modern form. Foucault was a talented early photographer. Gifted with his hands, he valued precision and loved clockwork. He worked in optics and electricity. Though steadfast in friendship, he could be stubborn and blunt. His collaboration with Hippolyte Fizeau ended in rift while the frankness of the newspaper articles that he wrote provoked hostilities that hindered his acceptance by academic peers. Telescope making and dreams of wealth from an industrial governor were curtailed by an agonizing early death. The blend of pure and applied in Foucault's work and the ordeals he suffered make him an intriguing case study as one of the last amateur scientists at a time when science was becoming institutionalized. The book assumes some familiarity with sample scientific terms, but no detailed knowledge of physics is required.