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Author Kean, Sam.

Title The disappearing spoon : and other true tales of madness, love, and the history of the world from the periodic table of the elements / Sam Kean.

Imprint New York : Little, Brown and Co., 2010.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 2nd Floor Stacks  546 K196d 2010    ---  Available
 PHS Non-Fiction  546 Kean    ---  Available
Edition 1st ed.
Description vi, 391 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
Study Program UG RL 10.0 19.0 185983
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. 377) and index.
Contents Orientation: Column by Column, Row by Row. Geography is destiny ; Near twins and black sheep: the genealogy of elements ; The Galapagos of the periodic table -- Making Atoms, Breaking Atoms. Where atoms come from : "We are all star stuff" ; Elements in time of war ; Completing the table with a bang ; Extending the table, expanding the Cold War -- Periodic Confusion: the Emergence of Complexity. From physics to biology ; Poisoner's corridor : "ouch-ouch" ; Take two elements, call me in the morning ; How elements deceive -- The Elements of Human Character. Political elements ; Elements as money ; Artistic elements ; An element of madness -- Element Science Today and Tomorrow. Chemistry way, way below zero ; Spheres of splendor: the science of bubbles ; Tools of ridiculous precision ; Above (and beyond) the periodic table -- The periodic table of elements.
Summary The periodic table of the elements is a crowning scientific achievement, but it's also a treasure trove of passion, adventure, obsession, and betrayal. These tales follow carbon, neon, silicon, gold, and all the elements in the table as they play out their parts in human history. The usual suspects are here, like Marie Curie (and her radioactive journey to the discovery of polonium and radium) and William Shockley (who is credited, not exactly justly, with the discovery of the silicon transistor)--but the more obscure characters provide some of the best stories, like Paul Emile Francois Lecoq de Boisbaudran, whose discovery of gallium, a metal with a low melting point, gives this book its title: a spoon made of gallium will melt in a cup of tea.--From publisher description.
Subject Chemical elements -- Miscellanea.
Periodic law -- Tables.
ISBN 9780316051644
0316051640

 
    
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