Physics for Everyone – Book 1 – Physical Bodies

After describing the series Physics for Everyone, and writing about Book 2, Book 3, Book 4 we finally come to Book 1 of the series, namely Physical Bodies.

From the preface Kitagorodsky recalls

After many years I decided to return to an unfinished book that I wrote together with Dau, as his friends called the remarkable scientist and great-hearted man Lev Davidovich Landau. The book was Physics for Everyone. Many readers in letters had reproached me for not continuing the book. But I found it difficult because the book was a truly joint venture. So here now is a new edition of Physics for Everyone, which I have divided into four small books, each one taking the reader deeper into the structure of matter. Hence the titles Physical Bodies, Molecules, Electrons, and Photons and Nuclei. The books encompass all the main laws of physics. Perhaps there is a need to continue Physics for Everyone and to devote subsequent issues to the basics of various fields of science and technology. The first two books have undergone only slight changes, but in places the material has been considerably augmented. The other two were written by me. The careful reader, I realize, will feel the difference. But I have tried to preserve the presentation principles that Dau and I followed. These are the deductive principle and the logical principle rather than the historical. We also felt it would he well to use the language of everyday life and inject some humour. At the same time we did not oversimplify. If the reader wants to fully understand subject, he must be prepared to read some places times and pause for thought..

The subject matter of Physical Bodies has undergone the least change. It is largely the first half of the previous edition of Physics for Everyone. Since the first book of the new edition contains phenomena that do not require a knowledge of the structure of matter, it was natural to call it Physical Bodies. Of course, another possibility was to use, as is usually done, the title Mechanics (i.e. the science of motion). But the theory of heat, which is covered in the second book, Molecules, also studies motion except that what is moving is the invisible molecules and atoms. So I think the title Physical Bodies is a better choice. Physical Bodies deals largely with the laws of motion and gravitational attraction. These laws will always re-
main the foundation of physics and for this reason of science as whole.

The book was translated from the Russian by Martin Greendlinger and published by Mir first in 1978.
You can download the book from here.

Here also I have tried to remake the cover and below is the result.

                

The book has following chapters

1. Basic Concepts
2. Laws of Motion
3. Conservation Laws
4. Oscillations
5. Motion of Solid Bodies
6. Gravitation
7. Pressure

The next post would be the book Physics for Everyone: Motion and Heat.

Update: All the books in the Physics for Everyone series are now up:

Physics for Everyone – Motion and Heat here.

Book 1- Physical Bodies here.

Book 2  – Molecules here.

Book 3 – Electrons here.

Book 4 – Photons and Nuclei here.

 

This entry was posted in books, mir books, mir publishers, physics for everyone, soviet and tagged , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

9 Responses to Physics for Everyone – Book 1 – Physical Bodies

  1. Aditya says:

    all physics for everyone links dead please reupload

    Like

  2. Mikhail says:

    whats the password for the zip file (physical bodies)

    Like

  3. Fernando Carmona says:

    Physics for Everyone – Motion and Heat and Book 4 are broken. Please, re upload the link

    Like

  4. Kabir says:

    What is password for all 4 books are file?

    Like

  5. macsons says:

    If you wish you can purchase the physical copy here

    https://www.ebay.com/itm/403168389519

    Like

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