Physics 10 - Lecture 01: Atoms and Heat

Added: Aug 21, 2007

From: ucberkeley

Duration: 73:59

Physics 10: Physics for Future Presidents. Spring 2006. Professor Richard A. Muller. The most interesting and important topics in physics, stressing conceptual understanding rather than math, with applications to current events. Topics covered may vary and may include energy and conservation, radioactivity, nuclear physics, the Theory of Relativity, lasers, explosions, earthquakes, superconductors, and quantum physics. [courses] [physics10] [spring2006] Credits: lecturer:Professor Richard A. Muller, producers:Educational Technology Services

Channel: Education

Tags: 10  berkeley  cal  class  course  education  physics  science  uc  webcast 

Rating: 4.79 (534 ratings)    Views: 226636' favoriteCount='1278    Comments: 25

sspoke Says:

Sep 10, 2008 - lol rahdises i already know that read that on wikipedia so i dont have to learn it??? since i know it already lol >.> anyways cant wait for that particle accelerator or whatever to get running.. thats what 2012 means hahahah

Jw1al1 Says:

Sep 12, 2008 - fuckkkk i was in this fuckin lecture! SHIEEETTT! lolol

edmondublianda Says:

Sep 17, 2008 - Thanks for sharing. It's my first acquintance with one of the Ivy League institutuions even if I'm in Penang, Malaysia now. Thanks for inventing You TUBE and thanks UCB for giving free videos. I dreamt my son Wallace will have a chance to study in your great university.

kb1686 Says:

Sep 17, 2008 - This isn't an Ivy League school. It's a very good school (maybe better than some Ivy League schools), but its not Ivy League. The Ivy League is an association of schools in the northeastern U.S. They have been (and will be) the same 8 schools for a very long time. They are: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, University of Pennsylvania, Dartmouth, Cornell, Columbia, and Brown.

edmondublianda Says:

Sep 18, 2008 - I see. Thanks for the info. You are right it is still among the 5 star Uni in the world. Is it true Stanford U is your rival? In what aspect?

amauta5 Says:

Sep 22, 2008 - UCB is ranked number 1 public school in the world. Ivy leagues are private.

panteat Says:

Sep 29, 2008 - thanks alot

tomislavpasaric Says:

Oct 4, 2008 - Great teaching,ty Mr.Muller

Kymer Says:

Oct 4, 2008 - Pitty the vid loses its sync after a while, but really, I have no right to complain. Thanks for uploading these lectures, they're awesome.

zagwi Says:

Oct 8, 2008 - 我也在看 !

Sectorsophia Says:

Oct 11, 2008 - Dude needs more caffeine

adkinje Says:

Oct 12, 2008 - this is a very unique class

LifeIsGoodTube Says:

Oct 16, 2008 - Look at those empty chairs in the lecture hall.. I would give my right leg to be in that lecture. Still, being able to watch these videos online is a great thing.

tltxhzj Says:

Oct 17, 2008 - cal is not ivy league, but we're better than most of them

blackbird7164 Says:

Oct 18, 2008 - imagine what a person missing a right leg would give

GermthaVicious Says:

Oct 19, 2008 - So if it takes say, 6 energy to pick something up, how is the energy when you drop it created, is it the same energy as picking it up, and what creates the energy, or what? I'm a little bit confused at how exactly that would work.

BregyptianMuslim Says:

Oct 20, 2008 - fantastic lecture, thanks for uploading!

andypusca Says:

Oct 22, 2008 - hello

BlackRiven Says:

Oct 25, 2008 - Holy shit this guy just bullshits the whole lecture. He takes the simplest types of scientific trivia and spends minutes saying pointless things about them. Start talking about science already! The whole lecture can be summarized into 30 minutes of actual information.

TheBrainchildGroup Says:

Oct 25, 2008 - Another great clip! I would have loved to be in this course.

hai2410 Says:

Nov 3, 2008 - you can;t create energy, you convert it. when you pick up a mass, such as a stone, you are converting 'food energy' into gravititational potential (the energy the stone has because of its height). when you drop the stone, the gravitational potential energy is converted into kinetic energy (energy of movement) as it falls.

kamyarghofrani Says:

Nov 4, 2008 - actua;y you can make energy from matter, nless you say they are the same things

hai2410 Says:

Nov 4, 2008 - You definetly can't 'make' energy, but yes I agree with your point, mass is energy. However, its more useful to think of mass being converted into energy, as matter has different properties to 'energy' per se

part2themovie Says:

Nov 6, 2008 - I hate those. Might as well read the text all night then sleep in class.

TannerDepper0 Says:

Nov 20, 2008 - Gay!