Just Super!

Cosmic Variance
By cjohnson
Sep 13, 2005 2:50 AMNov 5, 2019 8:03 AM
super.jpg

Newsletter

Sign up for our email newsletter for the latest science news
 

So you might have noticed that I've read the odd comic or two. You may also have noticed that I think about physics from time to time. So you'd guess therefore that if I saw this post about a book on physics and comics over at Caolionn's QuantumDiaries blog, I'd not be able to resist commenting, and then when the author showed up and commented as well, and pointed me to the website, and I saw the book's table of contents.....how could I not blog about it?! Table of contents:

Section 1â€"Mechanics 1. Up, Up, and Awayâ€"Forces and Motion 2. Deconstructing Kryptonâ€"Newton's Law of Gravity 3. The Day Gwen Stacy Diedâ€"Impulse and Momentum 4. Can He Swing from a Thread?â€"Centripetal Acceleration 5. Flash Factsâ€"Friction, Drag, and Sound 6. Like a Flash of Lightningâ€"Special Relativity 7. If This Be My Densityâ€"Properties of Matter 8. Can Ant-Man Punch His Way Out of a Paper Bag?â€"Torque and Rotation 9. Is Ant-Man Deaf, Dumb, and Blind?â€"Simple Harmonic Motion 10. Does Size Matter?â€"The Cube-Square Law Section 2â€"Energyâ€"Heat and Light 11. The Central City Diet planâ€"Conservation of Energy 12. The Case of the Missing Workâ€"The Three Laws of Thermodynamics 13. Mutant Meteorologyâ€"Conduction and Convection 14. How The Monstrous Menace of the Mysterious Melter Makes Dinner Preparation a Breezeâ€"Phase Transitions 15. Electro's Clinging Waysâ€"Electrostatics 16. Superman Schools Spider-Manâ€"Electrical Currents 17. How Electro Becomes Magneto When He Runsâ€"Ampere's Law 18. How Magneto Becomes Electro When He Runsâ€"Magnetism and Faraday's Law 19. Electro and Magneto Do the Waveâ€"Electromagnetism and Light Section 3â€"Modern Physics 20. Journey into the Microverseâ€"Atomic Physics 21. Not a Dream! Not a Hoax! Not an Imaginary Tale!â€"Quantum Mechanics 22. Through a Wall Lightlyâ€"Tunneling Phenomena 23. Sock It to Shellheadâ€"Solid-State Physics Section 4â€"What Have We Learned? 24. Me Am Bizarro!â€"Superhero Bloopers

Comment from the author (extract, from Caolionn's blog):

Actually, its a real physics book, written for the general public, which starts with Isaac Newton and goes all the way through a standard undergraduate curriculum up through how a transistor works. There are simple algebraic equations throughout. It is NOT a textbook, but again, a general audience book. The sneaky aspect is that there's not a single inclined plane or pulley in sight. Rather, ALL the examples come from comic books, and in particular, those cases where they get their physics right. So, granting a one-time miracle exception - if you were as strong as Superman, how much force would it take to leap a tall building in a single bound? If your strong legs resulted from your home planet having a larger gravity than Earth's - what is the minimum excess gravity of your planet? Now, how would you construct a planet with this excess gravity? You can do it - but it's hard to keep it from exploding! Answering these questions takes you through Newton's laws of motion and of gravitational attraction.

If like me, you teach Electromagnetism and Special Relativity (for example) and if like me you grew up reading Spiderman and X-Men comics (for example), you'll appreciate just how excellent the chapter headings 17 - 19 are!! I'd like to see this book, since if it is as good as the table of contents suggests, it'll be a blast to read, and would be a good one to recommend to some (especially younger) readers. Hmm, maybe I'll wait a while in case the author sends me a complimentary review copy (ahem!)... -cvj

1 free article left
Want More? Get unlimited access for as low as $1.99/month

Already a subscriber?

Register or Log In

1 free articleSubscribe
Discover Magazine Logo
Want more?

Keep reading for as low as $1.99!

Subscribe

Already a subscriber?

Register or Log In

More From Discover
Stay Curious
Join
Our List

Sign up for our weekly science updates.

 
Subscribe
To The Magazine

Save up to 40% off the cover price when you subscribe to Discover magazine.

Copyright © 2025 LabX Media Group