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Einstein's Fridge

The Science of Fire, Ice and the Universe

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
'Hugely readable and entertaining' JIM AL-KHALILI 'An accessible and crystal-clear portrait of this discipline's breadth, largely told through its history' PHIL BALL, PHYSICS WORLD Einstein's Fridge tells the story of how scientists uncovered the least known and yet most consequential of all the sciences, and learned to harness the power of heat and ice. The laws of thermodynamics govern everything from the behaviour of atoms to that of living cells, from the engines that power our world to the black hole at the centre of our galaxy. Not only that, but thermodynamics explains why we must eat and breathe, how the lights come on, and ultimately how the universe will end. The people who decoded its laws came from every branch of the sciences – they were engineers, physicists, chemists, biologists, cosmologists and mathematicians. Their discoveries, set over two hundred years, kick-started the industrial revolution, changed the course of world wars and informed modern understanding of black holes. This book captures the thrill of discovery and the power of revolutionary science to change the world forever.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 18, 2021
      Director Sen makes a convincing case for the importance of thermodynamics in his impressive debut. He argues that the first two laws of thermodynamics (that the energy of the universe is constant, and that the entropy of the universe tends to increase), as articulated in 1865, “are a testament to the human intellect and imagination” and are “every bit as significant as Newton’s laws of motion.” Sen tells of the scientists whose work led to the present understanding of thermodynamics, among them Sadi Carnot (the “founding father of the science of thermodynamics”); James Joule, with his “lifelong zeal for scientific experimentation”; Albert Einstein, whose “work derived from thermodynamics”; and Alan Turing, who uncovered “a beautiful aspect of the second law of thermodynamics.” Sen explains how an understanding of thermodynamics led to “the invention that catalyzed the Industrial Revolution,” the steam engine, and goes further in arguing that refrigeration, a process building on thermodynamic principles, enabled “the greatest improvement in human nutrition” since the advent of cooking. He accomplishes all of this with splendid prose, making ample use of analogies to explain complex scientific ideas. Sen’s history of hot and cold is pop-science that hits the mark. Agent: Patrick Walsh, Pew Literary.

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  • English

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