How to use physical reasoning to solve surprising paradoxes
Ever wonder why cats land on their feet? Or what holds a spinning top
upright? Or whether it is possible to feel the Earth's rotation in an
airplane? Why Cats Land on Their Feet is a compendium of paradoxes and
puzzles that readers can solve using their own physical intuition. And
the surprising answers to virtually all of these astonishing paradoxes
can be arrived at with no formal knowledge of physics.
Mark Levi introduces each physical problem, sometimes gives a hint or
two, and then fully explains the solution. Here readers can test their
critical-thinking skills against a whole assortment of puzzles and
paradoxes involving floating and diving, sailing and gliding,
gymnastics, bike riding, outer space, throwing a ball from a moving car,
centrifugal force, gyroscopic motion, and, of course, falling cats.
Want to figure out how to open a wine bottle with a book? Or how to
compute the square root of a number using a tennis shoe and a watch?
Why Cats Land on Their Feet shows you how, and all that's required is
a familiarity with basic high-school mathematics. This lively collection
also features an appendix that explains all physical concepts used in
the book, from Newton's laws to the fundamental theorem of calculus.