Author of the best-selling book The Elements Theodore Gray demonstrates essential scientific principles through thrilling daredevil experiments. In Mad Science, Theodore Gray launches a toy rocket using the energy released from an Oreo cookie, ignites a phosphorus sun by suspending half a gram of white phosphorus in a globe filled with pure oxygen and creates a homemade hot tub by adding 500 pounds of quicklime to water. These are just a few of the 54 experiments included in this astonishing book that demonstrates essential scientific principles in ways you were likely never exposed to in school. Every experiment in Mad Science is accompanied by full-color photographs that provide a front-row seat to rarely seen chemical reactions and glorious subatomic activity. To further enhance the hands-on experience, Gray includes step-by-step instructions for nearly every experiment. Following all of the safety guidelines, readers can even re-create some of the experiments in the book. Mad Science is the perfect book for anyone fascinated by all things chemical, electrical, or explosive, and who loves a vicarious thrill.
Should be titled "Experiments You Probably _Can't_ do at Home"
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
This is a beautiful, fun, inspiring, and thoroughly entertaining book, but it's also filled with experiments requiring either heavy machining equipment or substances that you need a license to buy. You could only do these experiments at home if you also have a machine shop in that home. Mr Gray probably has all the equipment in his basement, but most folks don't. For those looking for cool stuff to do with kids, the "sneaky uses for everyday things" books are a better source, if less entertaining in their own right.
Very good read, very interesting
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
This book clearly explains a variety of experiments and the danger levels of each. While most are listed as more dangerous than you should try at home, even those are clearly explained in case you decide to try it out. Good reading even if you don't want to risk doing any.
Danger, Danger, Danger...the fun kind you won't actually need to be in!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
This is a beautifully-photographed and illustrated book rife with the kind of elemental wizardry we all wished our chemistry and physics professors had the guts (and liability insurance) to demonstrate. Why see it on the Discovery Channel, et. al. when you can hold nearly 50 wild and crazy experiments safely in your hands, living vicariously as Theo Gray risks poking an eye out or melting the earth just below his feet. This book was so fun that I experienced every experiment in one read! And now I'll get to relive the details I found literally humorous with more friends and family. An impressive collection of scientific mayhem!
Best present ever
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
This book is one that your kids (or husbands) will treasure forever. It contains some of the most exciting things in chemistry they could "safely" do (with supervision...) After buying one copy, we are buying a dozen more as gifts.
Comments from a 13-year-old and an 88-year-old retired physicist
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
Who among us hasn't wanted to blow something up? I lent my copy of this book to a very distinguished 88-year-old who made pioneering measurements of the properties of single crystal metals. A week later I dropped in to see him. "I read the whole thing," he reported. "Every page. This guy is telling people how to do really DANGEROUS things! It's great! I just hope no one gets killed." Reminded by Gray's alkali metals explosions, he was eager to tell me about the time he himself threw a chunk of sodium into the stream near his house. He was 12 years old. It was 1933. ("We could get that sort of thing then; kids today can't. I took it from my brother's chemistry set when he was off at college.") "The explosion was enormous, much bigger than I expected. Glass pieces flew all around my head. I could have been killed." He paused, a big smile on his face. "I never told my mother." The rest of our conversation focused on how today's kids just don't get to tinker and experiment with materials the way we did in his day, and even in mine. He thinks the best thing about this book is that the excitement gets captured in Theo Gray's words (which are often funny) and the GREAT pictures; maybe reading this book can give kids -- and even adults who missed this part of growing up -- a feel for what those of us who survived those childhoods remember most fondly about them. Shortly after that conversation I was talking with a woman whose 13-year-old son bought a copy. He, too, read the whole thing. But he got mad when he realized that he couldn't really repeat these experiments in their kitchen. (I guess he'll just have to sign up for chemistry lab, if any school still has one.) So there they are -- 75 years apart in age: both read it from cover to cover and want to tell all about it. What more recommendation do you need? You don't even have to hear what I think. (But I'll tell you anyway: this is THE ULTIMATE GIFT BOOK and you should start by giving it to yourself.) Reading never killed anyone; the only way this book can kill you is from laughing. (And if you really must repeat any of the experiments, Gray is actually VERY CAREFUL to point out what the risks are and how to avoid them).
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