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January 1, 1985

Season 1

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01. Introduction

This preview introduces revolutionary ideas and heroes from Copernicus to Newton, and links the physics of the heavens and the earth.

January 1, 1985
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02. The Law of Falling Bodies

Galileo's imaginative experiments proved that all bodies fall with the same constant acceleration.

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03. Derivatives

The function of mathematics in physical science and the derivative as a practical tool.

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04. Inertia

Galileo risks his favored status to answer the questions of the universe with his law of inertia.

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05. Vectors

Physics must explain not only why and how much, but also where and which way.

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06. Newton's Laws

Newton lays down the laws of force, mass, and acceleration.

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07. Integration

Newton and Leibniz arrive at the conclusion that differentiation and integration are inverse processes.

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08. The Apple and the Moon

The first real steps toward space travel are made as Newton discovers that gravity describes the force between any two particles in the universe.

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09. Moving in Circles

A look at the Platonic theory of uniform circular motion.

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10. Fundamental Forces

All physical phenomena of nature are explained by four forces: two nuclear forces, gravity, and electricity.

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11. Gravity, Electricity, Magnetism

Shedding light on the mathematical form of the gravitational, electric, and magnetic forces.

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12. The Millikan Experiment

A dramatic recreation of Millikan's classic oil-drop experiment to determine the charge of a single electron.

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13. Conservation of Energy

According to one of the major laws of physics, energy is neither created nor destroyed.

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14. Potential Energy

Potential energy provides a powerful model for understanding why the world has worked the same way since the beginning of time.

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15. Conservation of Momentum

What keeps the universe ticking away until the end of time?

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16. Harmonic Motion

The music and mathematics of periodic motion.

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17. Resonance

Why a swaying bridge collapses with a high wind, and why a wine glass shatters with a higher octave.

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18. Waves

With an analysis of simple harmonic motion and a stroke of genius, Newton extended mechanics to the propagation of sound.

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19. Angular Momentum

An old momentum with a new twist.

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20. Torques and Gyroscopes

From spinning tops to the precession of the equinoxes.

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21. Kepler's Three Laws

The discovery of elliptical orbits helps describe the motion of heavenly bodies with unprecedented accuracy.

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22. The Kepler Problem

The deduction of Kepler's laws from Newton's universal law of gravitation is one of the crowning achievements of Western thought.

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23. Energy and Eccentricity

The precise orbit of a heavenly body — a planet, asteroid, or comet — is fixed by the laws of conservation of energy and angular momentum.

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24. Navigating in Space

Voyages to other planets use the same laws that guide planets around the solar system.

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25. Kepler to Einstein

From Kepler's laws and the theory of tides, to Einstein's general theory of relativity, into black holes, and beyond.

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26. Harmony of the Spheres

A last lingering look back at mechanics to see new connections between old discoveries.

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27. Beyond the Mechanical Universe

The world of electricity and magnetism, and 20th-century discoveries of relativity and quantum mechanics.

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28. Static Electricity

Eighteenth-century electricians knew how to spark the interest of an audience with the principles of static electricity.

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29. The Electric Field

Faraday's vision of lines of constant force in space laid the foundation for the modern force field theory.

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30. Potential and Capacitance

Franklin proposes a successful theory of the Leyden jar and invents the parallel plate capacitor.

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31. Voltage, Energy, and Force

When is electricity dangerous or benign, spectacular or useful?

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32. The Electric Battery

Volta invents the electric battery using the internal properties of different metals.

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33. Electric Circuits

The work of Wheatstone, Ohm, and Kirchhoff leads to the design and analysis of how current flows.

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34. Magnetism

Gilbert discovered that the earth behaves like a giant magnet. Modern scientists have learned even more.

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35. The Magnetic Field

The law of Biot and Sarvart, the force between electric currents, and Ampère's law.

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36. Vector Fields and Hydrodynamics

Force fields have definite properties of their own suitable for scientific study.

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37. Electromagnetic Induction

The discovery of electromagnetic induction in 1831 creates an important technological breakthrough in the generation of electric power.

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38. Alternating Current

Electromagnetic induction makes it easy to generate alternating current while transformers make it practical to distribute it over long distances.

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39. Maxwell's Equations

Maxwell discovers that displacement current produces electromagnetic waves or light.

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40. Optics

Many properties of light are properties of waves, including reflection, refraction, and diffraction.

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41. The Michelson-Morley Experiment

In 1887, an exquisitely designed measurement of the earth's motion through the ether results in the most brilliant failure in scientific history.

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42. The Lorentz Transformation

If the speed of light is to be the same for all observers, then the length of a meter stick, or the rate of a ticking clock, depends on who measures it.

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43. Velocity and Time

Einstein is motivated to perfect the central ideas of physics, resulting in a new understanding of the meaning of space and time.

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44. Mass, Momentum, Energy

The new meaning of space and time make it necessary to formulate a new mechanics.

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45. Temperature and Gas Laws

Hot discoveries about the behavior of gases make the connection between temperature and heat.

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46. Engine of Nature

The Carnot engine, part one, beginning with simple steam engines.

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47. Entropy

The Carnot engine, part two, with profound implications for the behavior of matter and the flow of time through the universe.

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48. Low Temperatures

With the quest for low temperatures came the discovery that all elements can exist in each of the basic states of matter.

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49. The Atom

A history of the atom, from the ancient Greeks to the early 20th century, and a new challenge for the world of physics.

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50. Particles and Waves

Evidence that light can sometimes act like a particle leads to quantum mechanics, the new physics.

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51. From Atoms to Quarks

Electron waves attracted to the nucleus of an atom help account for the periodic table of the elements and ultimately lead to the search for quarks.

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52. The Quantum Mechanical Universe

A last look at where we've been and a peek into the future.