What do films like Independence Day, Armageddon and X-Men have in common? The answer is that apart from costing millions of dollars to make, they all feature in a new course called Physics in Films that is being taught to students at the University of Central Florida. Costas Efthimiou, the mathematical physicist who teaches the course, believes that non-science students learn more about the fundamentals of physics by studying films and science fiction than they do from more traditional approaches. —Physics Goes to Hollywood (PhysicsWeb)
Similar:
Birthright, Part 2 (#StarTrek #TNG Rewatch, Season 6, Episode 17) Worf sows disorder in a ...
Rewatching ST:TNG L'Kor tells Worf th...
Ethics
Neuroscientist Explores the Ethical Quandries of a Digital Afterlife
Now imagine the resources required to si...
Culture
Snap's share price sinks, trades just above IPO price
NASDAQ.com throws shade via Reuters:
Sn...
Business
Thirteen seconds. Dozens of bullets. One explosive photo.
Forget for a moment that the picture is ...
Culture
That Class Where Stanford Profs Projected Hundreds of Zoom Students on a Video Wall
Of course, not all institutions happen t...
Academia
A 27-Story Vertical Forest Grows in Milan
Bosco Verticale was conceived in respons...
Aesthetics


