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ePub Time's Pendulum: The Quest to Capture Time--From Sundials to Atomic Clocks download

by Jo Ellen Barnett

ePub Time's Pendulum: The Quest to Capture Time--From Sundials to Atomic Clocks download
Author:
Jo Ellen Barnett
ISBN13:
978-0306457876
ISBN:
0306457873
Language:
Publisher:
Plenum Trade (1998)
Category:
Subcategory:
Astronomy & Space Science
ePub file:
1959 kb
Fb2 file:
1988 kb
Other formats:
txt mobi rtf lrf
Rating:
4.2
Votes:
783

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Thus time was not at all uniform: clocks and bells striking at different times caused such a cacophony in. .Barnett also explores the more philosophical question of the nature of time.

The pendulum clock, with its greatly improved accuracy, put an end to the tyranny of the sun. It also allowed mariners to determine longitude aboard ship for the first time, opening the globe to exploration.

What better moment to ponder the concept of time than the dawning of a new millennium? This poetic and evocative work tells the story of how humankind has striven to capture time through the ages

What better moment to ponder the concept of time than the dawning of a new millennium? This poetic and evocative work tells the story of how humankind has striven to capture time through the ages What better moment to ponder the concept of time than the dawning of a new millennium? This poetic and evocative work tells the story of how humankind has striven to capture time through the ages. From the earliest sundials to today's atomic clocks, we have slowly refined our ability to measure this powerful and elusive force, yet none of our clever instruments has ever been able to answer the age-old question - What is time?

Time's Pendulum book. nearly ten billion times more accurate than the pendulum clock.

Time's Pendulum book. A tour of the discoveries and the inventors who endeavored to chart and understand time, Time's Pendulum also explains how each new advance gradually transformed our perception of the world.

Isis 90 (2):343-344 (1999). Similar books and articles. The Measurement of Time: Time, Frequency, and the Atomic Clock. Time's Pendulum: The Quest to Capture Time-From Sundials to Atomic Clocks by Jo Ellen Barnett. Paul Forman - 2002 - Isis: A Journal of the History of Science 93:522-523. David A. King - 2004 - Annals of Science 61 (3):375-388. Time Deposits, Dimensions, and Fraud. I. Barnett & Walter E. Block - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 88 (4):711-716. Sundials in Cetius Faventinus.

Jo Ellen Barnett has had a life-long fascination with clocks and timekeeping. Time's Pendulum is her first book. She lives in New York City. Seller Inventory APC9780156006491.

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book by Jo Ellen Barnett. A perfect balance of science, history, and sociology, Time's Pendulum traces the important developments in humankind's epic quest to measure the hours, days, and years with accuracy, and how our concept of time has changed with each new technological breakthrough.

Time's pendulum : the quest to capture time - from sundials to atomic clocks. A perfect balance of science, history, and sociology, Time's Pendulum traces the important developments in humankind's epic quest to measure the hours, days, and years with accuracy, and how our. Pt. The Time of Day The Planetary Basis of Our Day The Sundial and Its Temporary Hours The Measurement of the Night Hours The Canonical Hours The Selling of Time The Mechanical Clock: The Product Th. More). A perfect balance of science, history, and sociology, Time's Pendulum traces the important developments in humankind's epic quest to measure the hours, days, and years with accuracy, and how ou. A Pilot Intervention to Improve the Structural Quality of Exam Essay Writing in UK Undergraduate Psychology Students.

Time's Pendulum: The Quest to Capture Time - From Sundials to Atomic Clocks, by Jo Ellen Barnett, Perseus Books, ISBN 0306457873, 1998. Longitude: the true story of a lone genius who solved the greatest scientific problem of his time, by Dava Sobel, Harper Perennial, ISBN 0007214227, 2005 A great book about an incredible story! Books about astronomical calculations. Astronomy on the personal computer, by Richard M. West, Springer, ISBN 3540672214, 2000.

Jo Ellen Barnett takes us a step further in our perpetual quest to comprehend time. She bridges the gap between the mechanical clocks which record the fleeting moment as it passes, and the powerful radioactive "clocks" which have opened up to us the eons of the earth's history, by showing that both are based upon the counting of identical time segments. Beginning with a historical look at clocks to tell the time of day, she discusses the impact of such inventions as the church bell, the pendulum, and the wristwatch on human culture, and explains how they've gradually transformed our perception not only of the world, but of time itself.
  • Excellent book! Very good condition.

  • The first half of this book is excellent in terms of tracking societal evolution and how it meshes with the technical evolution of modern timekeeping devices as well as explaining railroad time and zone time. So facinating that I couldn't put it down. The second half was so boring and dogmatic that if it weren't for the indignation it will certainly cause in any thinking adult, I wouldn't have been able to read 10 pages without going comatose. It covers the world of scientific speculation on the subject of the age of the Earth with virtually no objectivity or tolerance of any alternative opinion. Not only is the second half of the book poorly researched, supported and written (though, to give the author credit it can be difficult to write 170+ pages of unsupportable dogmatic drivel and make it interesting) it isn't even on the same subject you might expect the book to address. If you buy the book, I would recommend saving yourself the tears of frustration and skip part II.