Head First Physics: A Learner's Companion to Mechanics and Practical Physics (Head First) | 
| Author: Heather Lang Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Inc. Category: Book
List Price: $29.99 Buy New: $15.59 You Save: $14.40 (48%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 215616
Format: Illustrated Media: Paperback Edition: Pap/Pas Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 940 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.9 Dimensions (in): 9 x 8 x 1.7
ISBN: 0596102372 Dewey Decimal Number: 530 EAN: 9780596102371 ASIN: 0596102372
Publication Date: October 3, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review Whether you're struggling to pass the AP Physics B exam, fighting a headache from your college physics course, or just want to understand how the world around you really works, Head First Physics will give you what you need to master algebra-based mechanics and practical physics. Designed for the way your brain works instead of a text-heavy approach that puts you to sleep, this book offers a multi-sensory learning experience and encourages a deeper understanding of the material.
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| Hey! You’re a learner who is struggling in Physics so... Learn Physics the Head First way... Physics textbooks or exam prep books usually present you with all the facts you might need to know, in quick-fire style. In Head First Physics, there is space for you to explore and make your own discoveries. The book is interactive and you directly play a part. For example, you'll spend 44 pages exploring vectors in a treasure hunt competition rather than having the "facts" thrown at you in the space of three pages. | | It's the exploration that makes things stick?and makes the physics easier to learn. You're immersing yourself in the scenario rather than "reading along and nodding" from the "outside" like you would for most books. Overcome past learning struggles... Two topics in particular are in the "crossover" between math and physics ? dealing with forces applied at angles and understanding the mathematics of circular and simple harmonic motion. Many students say that they can "use" the equations but don't really understand what they mean, so they become stuck when faced with more complicated problems. This is because typical physics books state these equations as fact, without giving much help or guidance in thinking through what the equations mean and why they work. |  | |
| In Head First Physics, you spend a whole chapter building a solid foundation with angles and right-angled triangles by working out how to defend a castle. And for circular motion, you spend a whole chapter implementing a hamster training schedule, again exploring and working everything out for yourself. You are then able to use your depth of understanding to solve more complicated problems by breaking them down into simpler ones you already know how to do. | Make connections... Forces... Newton’s Laws... Energy... Work... Connect forces and Newton's Laws to energy and work. Most physics books say something like: "Here are Newton's three laws, in order. Here are some other equations for momentum conservation and impulse. Here are a couple more equations for potential and kinetic energy." But the connections between them aren't made clear, and most students treat them as a list of separate things to be memorized. In Head First Physics, you find out about momentum conservation (while helping some pirates deal with a ghost ship), which you use to discover Newton's 2nd & 3rd laws and impulse. After doing an assignment for "Fakebusters" investigating a phony "instant weight loss" machine and being a physics consultant on a computer game, you discover energy conservation while working out a way to lift the sword in the stone using physics. Everything builds logically and the connections are clear because you've discovered them for yourself by using what you already knew to figure out something new. |
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| Apply physics to real life situations In Chapter 12 we introduce a Sim Football computer game, where you have to help a programmer who's good at writing games but not very good at physics. You have to think about how lots of different elements in a football game?passing, tackling, kicking, etc.?work in real life, then translate them into equations for the programmer. And once you've done that, you have to deal with extra problems that come up?like the players sliding the full length of the pitch after a tackle, or the CEO wanting to include a level where you play on the moon! This is just like real life, where solving a problem often brings something else to the surface. You can apply many of the problem solving approaches in the book to more than just physics! | | Advice to learners from Heather Don't try to memorize! That's got to be the most important thing. Physics is like a sport ? you learn best by doing rather than by memorizing. So the whole book's geared towards learning by doing, through solving problems as you go along. Start with a sketch, and write down all the values you already know on it. This gets the visual parts of your brain working and gives you a single reference on your page where you've collected together everything you know so far. Ask: "What's it LIKE"? Physics is about the world around you, and you already have plenty of experience there. Your sketch may remind you of a scenario you've seen before, or a similar problem you've previously solved, even if the "story" is different. Don't be afraid to have a go. The best way to solve a problem is to start it. You won't always see in advance how you're going to work your way through the problem, but as you sketch and write things down you'll often get ideas popping into your head that you can run with. |
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Product Description Wouldn't it be great if there were a physics book that showed you how things work instead of telling you how? Finally, with Head First Physics, there is. This comprehensive book takes the stress out of learning mechanics and practical physics by providing a fun and engaging experience, especially for students who "just don't get it." Head First Physics offers a format that's rich in visuals and full of activities, including pictures, illustrations, puzzles, stories, and quizzes -- a mixed-media style proven to stimulate learning and retention. One look will convince you: This isn't mere theory, this is physics brought to life through real-world scenarios, simple experiments, and hypothetical projects. Head First Physics is perfect for anyone who's intrigued by how things work in the natural world. You'll quickly discover that physics isn't a dry subject. It's all about the world we live in, encompassing everything from falling objects and speeding cars, to conservation of energy and gravity and weightlessness, and orbital behavior. This book: - Helps you think like a physicist so you can understand why things really work the way they do
- Gives you relevant examples so you can fully grasp the principles before moving on to more complex concepts
- Designed to be used as a supplement study guide for the College Board's Advanced Placement Physics B Exam
- Introduces principles for the purpose of solving real-world problems, not memorization
- Teaches you how to measure, observe, calculate -- and yes -- how to do the math
- Covers scientific notation, SI units, vectors, motion, momentum conservation, Newton's Laws, energy conservation, weight and mass, gravitation and orbits, circular motion and simple harmonic motion, and much more
If "Myth Busters" and other TV programs make you curious about our physical world -- or if you're a student forced to take a physics course -- now you can pursue the subject without the dread of boredom or the fear that it will be over your head. Head First Physics comes to the rescue with an innovative, engaging, and inspirational way to learn physics!
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| Customer Reviews:
If Interested in the Physics of Mechanics - Take a Look November 15, 2008 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
This book is advertised as a "learner's companion to mechanics and practical physics." The key parts of that phrase are "companion" and "mechanics." It is not a text book. The scope of the book primarily involves Newtonian mechanics, and the background you need to understand the topic. That includes significant amounts of solid geometry and algebra. Many other areas of introductory physics such as electricity, magnetism, wave-particle dualism of matter, and basic atomic theory are not discussed. The index is quite comprehensive, the appendix lists important mechanics equations for easy reference.
It is cleverly written, and emphasizes learning by doing, there are many thought problems, and dialogs that attempt to lead the reader to clues that will aid in problem solving. For the person not interested in getting bogged down in a general text, it would be a fun exercise to go through the book at a leisurely pace, reading the dialogs, solving the problems, and letting the physics of Galileo and Newton slowly percolate through one's gray matter.
However, I must admit that I don't know the audience for the book. It is not complete enough to be a text. A glance at two texts, one a college text, the other an advanced high school physics text show page counts between 900 and 1100. This book has a page count of 895. I can't imagine a busy student working through not only the information in their assigned text but the additional material that covers mechanics in this book, enjoyable as that might be. If it is not a book for students taking physics for credit, then the other two groups that come to mind are teachers of physics, who might learn some worthwhile techniques to pique student interest, and the casual learner no longer in school, who wishes to pursue the pure enjoyment of learning or relearning mechanics. If either of those descriptions fits your interest, take a look.
Read the entire title before purchasing October 25, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This book is as good any of the Head First books I have purchased and used. In this case I used it to tutor some kids in the mechanics portion of physics. However, be sure to read the ENTIRE title - "Head First Physics: A Learner's Companion to Mechanics and Practical Physics". Thus the emphasis is on the mechanics portion of physics and the tone is practical in nature. There is enough rigor there, but the tone is conversational as in all of the Head First books by O'Reilly.
If you are looking for a tutorial on optics, acoustics, electricity and magnetism, and the rest of what composes a college freshman two-semester sequence on general engineering physics prepare to be disappointed - very disappointed. However, that is not what the author is selling you. I wouldn't recommend this as a stand-alone text - I don't think it is rigorous enough to be that. However, as a supplement to a standard college physics text on the mechanics portion of physics, I think it does a great job. It turns the incomprehensible into something that a good student willing to put forth some effort can understand and turns all of the talk of vectors and forces into an approach to mechanics problems that the student can use to attack most mechanics problems. For that purpose I highly recommend it. The student doesn't need to know calculus. The highest mathematics used is trigonometry. The following is the table of contents that is currently unavailable in the product description: Chapter 1. think like a physicist Chapter 2. making it all MEAN something Chapter 3. scientific notation, area, and volume Chapter 4. equations and graphs Chapter 5. dealing with directions Chapter 6. Displacement, Velocity, and Acceleration Chapter 7. Equations of motion (part 1) Chapter 8. Equations of motion (part 2) Chapter 9. triangles, trig and trajectories Chapter 10. momentum conservation Chapter 11. weight and the normal force Chapter 12. using forces, momentum, friction and impulse Chapter 13. torque and work Chapter 14. energy conservation Chapter 15. tension, pulleys and problem solving Chapter 16. circular motion (part 1) Chapter 17. circular motion (part 2) Chapter 18. gravitation and orbits Chapter 19. Oscillations (part 1) Chapter 20. Oscillations (part 2) Chapter 21. think like a physicist Appendix A. leftovers Appendix B. equation table
The Scope of Head First Physics October 24, 2008 3 out of 8 found this review helpful
Head First Physics is an excellent book within its scope--doing well on AP Physics Mechanics and solving mechanics problem sets both graphically and with a minimal of calculations.But, the scope seems much more limited than other Head First Books like Head First Statistics Head First Statistics (Head First) and Head First Software Development Head First Software Development (Brain-Friendly Guides)---these not only showed how to solve and work with a number of elementary problems throughout the field they cover, but also successfully give an overview and intuitive feeling for approaching the whole field and what its tools and methods are good for. I was also a little surprised that a introductory Physics text wouldn't discuss electricity, magnetism, waves and particles, fields, and atomic phenomena. As I said this book is excellent within its purview but the scope is limited to doing well in the problems of Basic Mechanics Course, not even covering the operation of simple machines like pulleys, levers, gears etc.
In short this text will show you what you need to do well in Mechanics for AP Physics, or a College Course in Mechanics, with intuition and a minimum of effort, but it will not give you a well rounded conception of what the entire field of physics is about, or how to apply these principles in a wide range of engineering problems in electronics, robotics, etc.
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