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11 votes
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Elliptic Orbits explained by Albert Baez
4 votes -
The self-levitating Kingsbury aerodynamic bearing
9 votes -
The incredible physics behind N95 masks
9 votes -
Meet Oklo, the Earth’s two-billion-year-old only known natural nuclear reactor
17 votes -
507 movements
8 votes -
What is a great book to learn high-school level physics?
That's a requirement for a test I'm going to take. I tend to learn better with well designed, reasonably comprehensive books that don't treat me like a dumbass (not as a genius either!). Please...
That's a requirement for a test I'm going to take. I tend to learn better with well designed, reasonably comprehensive books that don't treat me like a dumbass (not as a genius either!).
Please notice that I'm not asking for websites, interactive platforms, videos, or whatever, but about books, preferably ones that I can study on my Kindle (so PDFs are not ideal). I know all the major websites but I just can't follow them.
I can pay very small amounts but I'm pretty much unemployed in a third world country so free is always better.
If there are requirements to understand such books, kindly inform!
I finished school more than 20 years ago and I was not a good student. But I'm kind of a decent learner now that I have a diagnostics (ADHD).
Thanks a bunch!
EDIT: guys, I am actually a beginner in the sense that I literally know little to nothing about the subject! I'm also not a math wizard. Advanced suggestions are appreciated but also entirely useless. This is also for a test, so, beyond a very brief introduction, general understandings on the Neil DeGrasse Tyson level is also of little use for me. I don't need to understand the beauty of the cosmos, I need to pass a test. Thanks!
10 votes -
LIGO/Virgo’s newest black hole merger defies mass expectations
5 votes -
Google performed the first quantum simulation of a chemical reaction
11 votes -
CERN experiments announce first indications of a rare Higgs decay to two muons
5 votes -
What's the color of an atom?
2 votes -
Alone on a mountaintop, awaiting a very hard rain
7 votes -
Hadrons are much more than the familiar protons and neutrons
3 votes -
ThorCon's thorium converter reactor
9 votes -
Lights and shadows
4 votes -
How weed eaters work (at 62,000 frames per second)
5 votes -
A super sensitive dark-matter search yields strange results. Researchers say there are three possible explanations for the anomalous data: One is mundane. Two would revolutionize physics
4 votes -
CERN makes bold push to build $23-billion super collider
12 votes -
Bertrand Russell’s infinite sock drawer
8 votes -
Marie Curie's PhD thesis
8 votes -
To make an atom-sized machine, you need a quantum mechanic
6 votes -
Scientists unravel challenge in improving fusion performance
7 votes -
Electrons may very well be conscious
12 votes -
Pulling seven G's in an F-16 and going supersonic with US Air Force Thunderbirds
4 votes -
A new type of chemical bond: The charge-shift bond
5 votes -
Inside curved spaces
5 votes -
Ask a cosmology PhD student (almost) anything!
Hi all, I am a PhD student focusing in cosmology. I wanted to up the science content here on Tildes, and I thought that one way to do so is to have an informal little Q&A session. As such, feel...
Hi all,
I am a PhD student focusing in cosmology. I wanted to up the science content here on Tildes, and I thought that one way to do so is to have an informal little Q&A session. As such, feel free to use this post to ask any questions you might have about cosmology specifically, and physics in general.
This may not be as exciting as some other science AMAs given that I am a rather early graduate student, so there may be a lot of questions I don't know the answer to. However, I'm willing to try my best and answer over the next few days, and to let you know I don't know if I don't!
A bit about myself: I did my undergraduate degree at the University of Chicago where I studied physics and mathematics, and then I was a student researcher in a computational cosmology group at a national lab. I subsequently enrolled at UC Davis to continue studying cosmology. Ask me anything about physics, cosmology, or high performance computing!
I also invite anyone else with expertise to chime in as well!
23 votes -
Richard Feynman: Making the extraordinary look easy
5 votes -
Quantum steampunk: 19th-century science meets technology of today
5 votes -
Finally we may have a path to the fundamental theory of physics… and it’s beautiful
28 votes -
Are we ready for quantum computers?
3 votes -
How to tell matter from antimatter | CP violation and the Ozma problem
5 votes -
Freeman Dyson, visionary technologist, is dead at 96
13 votes -
Physicists take their closest look yet at an antimatter atom
10 votes -
Radical hydrogen-boron reactor could leapfrog current nuclear fusion tech
11 votes -
Fair dice (part 2/2)
4 votes -
A brief history of quantum mechanics
7 votes -
The other dark matter candidate
4 votes -
New evidence shows that the key assumption made in the discovery of dark energy is in error
12 votes -
Toward a grand unified theory of snowflakes
6 votes -
What are lost continents, and why are we discovering so many?
8 votes -
Quantum droplets win the 2019 Royal Society Publishing Photography Competition
9 votes -
Jackson Pollock deliberately avoided “coiling instabilities” when creating his paintings
5 votes -
Why the search for dark matter depends on ancient shipwrecks
7 votes -
The exquisite precision of time crystals
8 votes -
Loop quantum gravity explained
8 votes -
The 2019 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded, with one half to James Peebles and the other half jointly to Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz
7 votes -
Quantum Darwinism, an idea to explain objective reality, passes first tests
11 votes -
Winners of the 2020 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, Fundamental Physics and Mathematics announced, awarding a collective $21.6 million
5 votes -
Making new elements doesn’t pay. Just ask this Berkeley scientist.
5 votes