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Physics Code: Yakov Perelman's Comic Physics Class

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English Title Physics Code: Yakov Perelman's Comic Physics Class
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Russia(Russian)

Feature

★ Copyrights sold: Russian.

★ The first set of popular science comics to ignite a passion for science! Fun and engaging reading for learning the basics of math, physics, and chemistry—children can't put them down, and even beginners with zero foundation can easily get started.

★ The original books are classic popular science works that have taken the world by storm, having been published in over 20 countries with cumulative sales exceeding 2,000,000 copies!

★ This series includes the life's work of the renowned Russian popular science writer Yakov Perelman, whose 105 books have established his authority and whose "physics for Fun" have influenced generations of readers worldwide; and the famous French naturalist Jean-Henri Fabre, who, in addition to "Souvenirs Entomologiques", left behind timeless masterpieces like "Les Cieux", "The Mysteries of The Earth" and "Entertaining Chemistry".

★ This series has newly adapted these classic originals into fun comic stories, bringing abstract concepts in math, physics, and chemistry to life within vivid narratives. Experimental principles become clear at a glance, making it easy to develop scientific thinking!

This series consists of 3 books:
"MathMathematical Code: Yakov Perelman's Comic Math Class"
"Physics Code: Yakov Perelman's Comic Physics Class"
"Chemistry Code: Jean-Henri Fabre's Comic Chemistry Class"

Description

The comic book is adapted from Yakov Perelman''s classic original work and presents physics knowledge in a comic format. The content is lively and vivid, with illustrations and text complementing each other. It includes interesting experiments (such as "How can you get a coin out of water without getting your hand wet?") and humorous dialogues, covering introductory topics such as magnets and inertia. Compared to the original, the comic version is more vivid and exaggerated, with easier-to-understand language. It emphasizes integrating scientific knowledge into interesting plots and exaggerated drawing styles, aiming to reduce the seriousness of popular science and stimulate teenagers' interest in physics.

Author

Yakov Perelman

Born in Grodno Province, Russia in 1882, Yakov Perelman graduated from the Saint Petersburg Forestry Institute in 1909. After that, he devoted all his energy to teaching and writing popular science works. From 1913 to 1916, he created "Physics Can Be Fun". Since then, he kept writing and successively produced a series of popular science books such as "Mathematics Can Be Fun", "Fun with Geometry" and "Fun with Mechanics". His books have been reprinted over 400 times in Russia and have been translated into more than ten languages, with a global cumulative sales of over 20 million copies.

Yakov Perelman published over 1,000 articles and more than 100 books in his lifetime, most of which were popular science works. Under his pen, complex knowledge turned into vivid and engaging stories, and the dull exercises in the classroom transformed into practical problems in life. His popular science works were highly entertaining and combined literary and scientific qualities, thus enjoying wide popularity and having a large readership.

Contents

1. Why do glass jars burst?
2. Why does a heavy snowfall promise a good harvest?
3. What's the secret of a balloon's "journey"?
4. Is boiling water always scalding hot?
5. What can be done in one thousandth of a second?
6. Can a watermelon really turn into a "cannonball"?
7. Jump forward or backward?
8. The magic of magnets
9. Why don't birds get electrocuted when standing on power lines?
10. How much is a lightning bolt worth?
11. The mystery of the talking drum
12. The speed of sound
13. Why does speaking produce an echo?
14. How do insects make sounds?
15. Why can people float on the Dead Sea?
16. The suspended sunken ship
17. The "greedy" goblet
18. The "superpower" of atmospheric pressure
19. The magic of inertia
20. What if there were no friction in the world?
21. How to package fragile items without breaking them?
22. The method of making fire by friction
23. Is the speed of a raft faster than that of the current?
24. Do giants have greater strength?

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