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Author Mitov, Michel.

Uniform Title Matiere sensible. Engilsh.
Title Sensitive matter : foams, gels, liquid crystals, and other miracles / Michel Mitov ; translated by Giselle Weiss.

Imprint Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 2012.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 2nd Floor Stacks  620.11 M697s 2012    ---  Available
Description xvi, 184 p. : ill. ; 22 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Matter, are you there? -- Sensitive matter, divine matter? -- Let us praise sensitivity, a unifying virtue -- Conciliation : the art of resolving conflicts: -- 1. Peacemaking among enemies-- easy when a mediator is involved -- 2. Dissolving fat in water : a question of organization -- 3. Don't mix, associate! -- Revelation : the little additive that changes everything: -- 4. Rubber : a story nearly cut short -- 5. The firefighter's jet stream : reach for the sky -- 6. The glamorous affair of gas and liquid -- 7. Down with foam! -- 8. Breathing : an unseen triumph -- 9. Familiarity and distance : colloids -- 10. Sensitive cooking; -- Adaptation : responding to the environment: -- 11. A cell, though not a prison -- 12. Putting drug delivery on controlled release -- 13. Perpetual sensitivity : granular matter -- 14. Liquefaction of the "blood" of St. Januarius.
Summary Discusses the importance of soft matter as one of the necessities of life and examines the versatility of such materials as red blood globules, lung fluid, and membranes.
Life would not exist without sensitive, or soft, matter. All biological structures depend on it, including red blood globules, lung fluid, and membranes. So do industrial emulsions, gels, plastics, liquid crystals, and granular materials. What makes sensitive matter so fascinating is its inherent versatility. Shape-shifting at the slightest provocation, whether a change in composition or environment, it leads a fugitive existence. Physicist Michel Mitov brings drama to molecular gastronomy (as when two irreconcilable materials are mixed to achieve the miracle of mayonnaise) and offers answers to everyday questions, such as how does paint dry on canvas, why does shampoo foam better when you 'repeat,' and what allows for the controlled release of drugs? Along the way we meet a futurist cook, a scientist with a runaway imagination, and a penniless inventor named Goodyear who added sulfur to latex, quite possibly by accident, and created durable rubber. As Mitov demonstrates, even religious ritual is a lesson in the surprising science of sensitive matter. Thrice yearly, the reliquary of St. Januarius is carried down cobblestone streets from the Cathedral to the Church of St. Clare in Naples. If all goes as hoped-and since 1389 it often has-the dried blood contained in the reliquary's largest vial liquefies on reaching its destination, and Neapolitans are given a reaffirming symbol of renewal. -- Publisher description
Subject Soft condensed matter.
Colloids.
Rheology.
Materials.
ISBN 9780674064560 (alk. paper)
0674064569 (alk. paper)
Standard No. 7206387

 
    
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