I have already indirectly talked about this before, but I see it more and more. Say you have a show. It has to be more than entertaining, it has to educational. How do you make things educational?
Segment 3B: Free Body Diagrams We illustrate how free body diagrams help us analyze force Segment 3B: Free Body Diagrams We visit a bustling port on Georgia's coast to illustrate how free body ...
Thinking diagrammatically as a way of conceptualizing our world has been in existence from the moment the first cave-person picked up a soft 'rock' and started making markings on the walls of his/her ...
One of the physics blogs I read regularly is ZapperZ's Physics and Physicists, where last week he posted an interesting observation about the difference between subjects when it comes to modes of ...
Illustration of a polaron The bright sphere is the electron, which is distorting the surrounding lattice. The wavy lines are high-order Feynman diagrams for the electron–phonon interaction. (Courtesy: ...
CBSE Class 12 Physics requires more than just memorizing formulas; it requires the ability to "show the science." Toppers ...
The two-component Fermi gas is the simplest fermion system exhibiting superfluidity, and as such is relevant to topics ranging from superconductivity to quantum chromodynamics. Ultracold atomic gases ...
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