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When the Uncertainty Principle Goes to 11

Or How to Explain Quantum Physics with Heavy Metal

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When the Uncertainty Principle Goes to 11

By: Philip Moriarty
Narrated by: Tim Gerard Reynolds
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About this listen

There are deep and fascinating links between heavy metal and quantum physics. No, there are. Really.

While teaching at the University of Nottingham, physicist Philip Moriarty noticed something odd, a surprising number of his students were heavily into metal music. Colleagues, too: a Venn diagram of physicists and metal fans would show a shocking amount of overlap.

What's more, it turns out that heavy metal music is uniquely well-suited to explaining quantum principles.

In When the Uncertainty Principle Goes to 11, Moriarty explains the mysteries of the universe's inner workings via drum beats and feedback: You'll discover how the Heisenberg uncertainty principle comes into play with every chugging guitar riff, what wave interference has to do with Iron Maiden, and why metalheads in mosh pits behave just like molecules in a gas.

If you're a metal fan trying to grasp the complexities of quantum physics, a quantum physicist baffled by heavy metal, or just someone who'd like to know how the fundamental science underpinning our world connects to rock music, this book will take you, in the words of a pioneering Texas thrash band, to A New Level.

For those who think quantum physics is too mind-bendingly complex to grasp, or too focused on the invisibly small to be relevant to our full-sized lives, this funny, fascinating book will show you that physics is all around us.... and it rocks.

©2018 Philip Moriarty (P)2018 Recorded Books
Music Physics Guitar
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An excellent book of exceptional clues

Music has been at the epicentre of the constant in my 68 years ( as of 02 11 2021) of being, the constan existential umbrella that could only be used to its full potential when the need arose and thanks to the uncertainty of entropy and Planks constant, that tiny slither of now allowed the release of the dormant existential and beautiful collisions emerged. Tom O'Rourke 1953 ? love always

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