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Life's Devices
A01=Steven Vogel
Acceleration
Addition
Appendage
Author_Steven Vogel
Biology
Blimp
Blood vessel
Buckling
Buoyancy
Calculation
Cantilever
Capillary action
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Category=PS
Circumference
Clockwise
Collagen
Convection
Corn syrup
Density
Dimensionless quantity
Drag coefficient
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Froude number
Fuel
Gelatin
Gravitational acceleration
Gravity
High pressure
Hinge
Insect
Internal pressure
International System of Units
Length
Lever
Measurement
Mechanical advantage
Microscope
Molecule
Motility
No-slip condition
Order of magnitude
Organism
Perpetual motion
Pressure
Projectile
Proportion (architecture)
Proportionality (mathematics)
Protein
Quantity
Requirement
Reynolds number
Scientist
Second law of thermodynamics
Square root
Stiffness
Stress concentration
Stress-strain curve
Surface area
Surface tension
Technology
Temperature
Tension (physics)
Tentacle
Thermoregulation
Tire
Ultimate tensile strength
Uncertainty
Variable (mathematics)
Velocity gradient
Vertebrate
Viscosity
Wind tunnel
Young's modulus
Product details
- ISBN 9780691024189
- Weight: 510g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 21 Dec 1988
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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This entertaining and informative book describes how living things bump up against non-biological reality. "My immodest aim," says the author, "is to change how you view your immediate surroundings." He asks us to wonder about the design of plants and animals around us: why a fish swims more rapidly than a duck can paddle, why healthy trees more commonly uproot than break, how a shark manages with such a flimsy skeleton, or how a mouse can easily survive a fall onto any surface from any height. The book will not only fascinate the general reader but will also serve as an introductory survey of biomechanics. On one hand, organisms cannot alter the earth's gravity, the properties of water, the compressibility of air, or the behavior of diffusing molecules. On the other, such physical factors form both constraints with which the evolutionary process must contend and opportunities upon which it might capitalize. Life's Devices includes examples from every major group of animals and plants, with references to recent work, with illustrative problems, and with suggestions of experiments that need only common household materials.
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