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The Simple Physics of Energy Use
Hardback

The Simple Physics of Energy Use

$431.99
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As a society we use energy for climate control and lighting in buildings, moving people and goods form one place to another and making things. Our standard of living depends on transforming energy locked up in fossil fuels, atomic nuclei or provided free of charge by the sun and wind into a form that we can use. This book uses simple classical physics (mechanics, thermodynamics and electromagnetism) to quantitatively review sources of energy and how we use them. It addresses key questions such as: Can renewables such as solar and wind take over from fossil fuels? How much will their use reduce CO2 emissions?To see what is important, numbers are used to estimate how big or small things are, but the maths is kept at the level of simple algebra and trigonometry. The aim is to give an overview of the big picture, to only worry about what really makes a difference. There’s also growing concern that CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuels will change climate irreversibly in harmful ways.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
7 September 2017
Pages
298
ISBN
9780198802297

As a society we use energy for climate control and lighting in buildings, moving people and goods form one place to another and making things. Our standard of living depends on transforming energy locked up in fossil fuels, atomic nuclei or provided free of charge by the sun and wind into a form that we can use. This book uses simple classical physics (mechanics, thermodynamics and electromagnetism) to quantitatively review sources of energy and how we use them. It addresses key questions such as: Can renewables such as solar and wind take over from fossil fuels? How much will their use reduce CO2 emissions?To see what is important, numbers are used to estimate how big or small things are, but the maths is kept at the level of simple algebra and trigonometry. The aim is to give an overview of the big picture, to only worry about what really makes a difference. There’s also growing concern that CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuels will change climate irreversibly in harmful ways.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
7 September 2017
Pages
298
ISBN
9780198802297