The Flying Circus of Physics by Jearl Walker (1975, published by John Wiley and Sons; "with Answers" in 1977; 2nd edition in 2007), is a book that poses and answers 740 questions that are concerned with everyday physics. There is a strong emphasis upon phenomena that might be encountered in one's daily life. The questions are interspersed with 38 "short stories" about related material.
The book covers topics relating to motion, fluids, sound, thermal processes, electricity, magnetism, optics, and vision.
There is a website for the book which stores over 11,000 references, 2,000 links, new material, a detailed index, and other supplementary material. There is also a collection of YouTube videos by the author on the material. See External links at the bottom of this page.
Jearl Walker is a professor of physics at Cleveland State University. He is also known for his work on the highly popular textbook of introductory physics, Fundamentals of Physics, which is currently in its 12th edition. From 1978 until 1990, Walker wrote The Amateur Scientist column in Scientific American magazine.
Examples
Typically, the questions posed by the book are about everyday phenomena that most people do not think about. For example, here is question 4.78, "A Candle Flame":
Note that this question is actually a series of closely related sub-questions. This is often the case. Here is another example; this one is an excerpt from question 5.2, "Lightning: People, cows, and sheep":
Here is a third example; this one is an excerpt from question 6.1, "Rainbows":
Many of the short stories are descriptions of particular events. For example, item 1.54 is the short story "Bomber crashes into Empire State Building." The story describes how this actually occurred in 1945 and what happened to the bomber, the building, and one of the elevators.
History
As is discussed in the preface of the book, the idea for the collection of real-world physics phenomena started when Jearl was a graduate student teaching assistant, and was asked by a student to give an example of how physics had anything to do with her life. The collection grew steadily over time, and he gave it a name that he thought would attract attention. Eventually it became large enough and popular enough to justify publication. The original 1975 edition provided no answers to the questions, but did provide references to use as a starting point. This was followed in 1977 by a modified 1st edition that included a section at the back with answers or partial answers to the questions. The author continued to work on the project and 31 years later, in 2006, the 2nd edition was released. It is a major expansion of the material and the answers now immediately follow the questions. The references for the 2nd edition are kept in an online website (see External links below) along with other useful material. The book has been translated and published in 11 different languages, the colorful covers of which can be seen here.
Reception
The various editions of the book all received highly favorable reviews.
The reviews make it clear that the book poses questions about the real world that most readers will find interesting and which present challenges at all levels of expertise from high school science student to professional physicist.
Edward Adelson, physicist at Ohio State University writes of the 2nd edition: "Jearl Walker, known for writing of exceptional clarity in his editions of Fundamentals of Physics by Halliday, Resnick, and Walker, has offered us a new, expanded version of The Flying Circus of Physics, his collection of natural phenomena and physics oddities. ... This book, full of examples you will want to think through or discuss with friends, also includes phenomena that have not yet been fully tested or explained. It is easy for a physicist to become immersed in this book and ignore colleagues, spouse, children, and earthquakes."
</references>
External links
- Official website, provides references, an index, new material, and other information related to the book.
- Archived website, use this if the official website is down.
- YouTube Videos by the author demonstrating the material from the book.
