|
issues and events
Teaching Physics with Superheroes
How did Superman get to be so strong? What killed Spider-Man's girlfriend Gwen Stacy? How fast can the Flash run? Jim Kakalios, a condensed matter experimentalist and comics buff, analyzes questions like these from action comics to teach physics in a freshman seminar at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities.
The Bernoulli principle, time travel, and the biological and physical feasibility and implications of shrinking to the size of an atom or growing into a giant are among the topics Kakalios's class tackles through comics. The comics don't get the science right all the time, says Kakalios, "but I am struck by how often they do." Over the years, he says, comics have kept up with the times: In the 1940s, a lot of superheroes gained their powers through some mystical artifact from the Far East; in the 1960s, they got them through radioactivity; and, since the 1990s, they get them through genetic engineering. A few years ago, adds Kakalios, results on entangled quantum states found their way into a comic book just months after they were published in Physical Review Letters.
It's a sneaky class, says Kakalios. "Basically, the course is really 'physics in the everyday world.' [Students] are so busy eating their superhero ice cream sundaes, they don't notice that I am feeding them their spinach."
Toni Feder
For a sampling of physics in comics and pop culture, see http://www.uky.edu/projects/chemcomics Comics references to the elements are gathered in this periodic table of comic books. http://intuitor.com/moviephysics/ The Insultingly Stupid Movie Physics Web site rates the accuracy of physics in popular films. http://www.badastronomy.com Misconceptions about astronomy from the news, movies, and elsewhere are highlighted on the Bad Astronomy Web site. In Two-Fisted Science (G.T. Labs, 1996) and other books, Jim Ottaviani portrays scenes from the history of physics through cartoons. http://www.msri.org/ext/larryg/ Larry Gonick pens cartoons to explain scientific concepts including special relativity and protein folding. Gonick is also coauthor of The Cartoon Guide to Physics (HarperInformation, 1991). http://www.physics.org/Life This Web site describes at a simple level how cars, washing machines, toasters, and other everyday objects work. You'll need Micromedia Flash Player to access this Web site. The Science of Superheroes is a new book by Lois Gresh and Robert Weinberg (Wiley, 2002). |
|
|