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baseline bum
11-15-2008, 02:49 PM
At 71, Physics Professor Is a Web Star (http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/19/education/19physics.html?_r=2&th&emc=th&oref=slogin&oref=slogin)

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2007/12/19/us/physicsnew600.jpg
Prof. Walter H. G. Lewin, No. 1 on the most downloaded list at iTunes U for a while, with objects he uses for his physics lessons.

By SARA RIMER
Published: December 19, 2007

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Walter H. G. Lewin, 71, a physics professor, has long had a cult following at M.I.T. And he has now emerged as an international Internet guru, thanks to the global classroom the institute created to spread knowledge through cyberspace.

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2007/12/19/us/mit650.jpg
Professor Lewin demonstrates physics of pendulums.

Professor Lewin’s videotaped physics lectures, free online on the OpenCourseWare of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, have won him devotees across the country and beyond who stuff his e-mail in-box with praise.

“Through your inspiring video lectures i have managed to see just how BEAUTIFUL Physics is, both astounding and simple,” a 17-year-old from India e-mailed recently.

Steve Boigon, 62, a florist from San Diego, wrote, “I walk with a new spring in my step and I look at life through physics-colored eyes.”

Professor Lewin delivers his lectures with the panache of Julia Child bringing French cooking to amateurs and the zany theatricality of YouTube’s greatest hits. He is part of a new generation of academic stars who hold forth in cyberspace on their college Web sites and even, without charge, on iTunes U, which went up in May on Apple’s iTunes Store.

In his lectures at ocw.mit.edu, Professor Lewin beats a student with cat fur to demonstrate electrostatics. Wearing shorts, sandals with socks and a pith helmet — nerd safari garb — he fires a cannon loaded with a golf ball at a stuffed monkey wearing a bulletproof vest to demonstrate the trajectories of objects in free fall.

He rides a fire-extinguisher-propelled tricycle across his classroom to show how a rocket lifts off.

He was No. 1 on the most downloaded list at iTunes U for a while, but that lineup constantly evolves. The stars this week included Hubert Dreyfus, a philosophy professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and Leonard Susskind, a professor of quantum mechanics at Stanford.

Last week, Yale put some of its most popular undergraduate courses and professors online free. The list includes Controversies in Astrophysics with Charles Bailyn, Modern Poetry with Langdon Hammer and Introduction to the Old Testament with Christine Hayes.

M.I.T. recently expanded its online classes by opening a site aimed at high school students and teachers. Judging from his fan e-mail, Professor Lewin, who is among those featured on the new site, appeals to students of all ages.

Some of his correspondents compare him to Richard Feynman, the free-spirited, bongo-playing Nobel laureate who popularized physics through his books, lectures and television appearances.

With his wiry grayish-brown hair, his tortoiseshell glasses and his intensity, Professor Lewin is the iconic brilliant scientist. But like Julia Child, he is at once larger than life and totally accessible.

“We have here the mother of all pendulums!” he declares, hoisting his 6-foot-2, 170-pound self on a 30-pound steel ball attached to a pendulum hanging from the ceiling. He swings across the stage, holding himself nearly horizontal as his hair blows in the breeze he created.

The point: that a period of a pendulum is independent of the mass — the steel ball, plus one professor — hanging from it.

“Physics works!” Professor Lewin shouts, as the classroom explodes in cheers.

“Hi, Prof. Lewin!!” a fan who identified himself as a 17-year-old from China wrote. “I love your inspiring lectures and I love MIT!!!”

A fan who said he was a physics teacher from Iraq gushed: “You are now my Scientific Father. In spite of the bad occupation and war against my lovely IRAQ, you made me love USA because you are there and MIT is there.”

Professor Lewin revels in his fan mail and in the idea that he is spreading the love of physics. “Teaching is my life,” he said.

The professor, who is from the Netherlands, said that teaching a required course in introductory physics to M.I.T. students made him realize “that what really counts is to make them love physics, to make them love science.”

He said he spent 25 hours preparing each new lecture, choreographing every detail and stripping out every extra sentence.

“Clarity is the word,” he said.

Fun also matters. In another lecture on pendulums, he stands back against the wall, holding a steel ball at the end of a pendulum just beneath his chin. He has just demonstrated how potential energy turns into kinetic energy by sending the ball flying across the stage, shattering a pane of glass he had bolted to the wall.

Now he will demonstrate the conservation of energy.

“I am such a strong believer in the conservation of energy that I am willing to risk my life for it,” he says. “If I am wrong, then this will be my last lecture.”

He closes his eyes, and releases the ball. It flies back and forth, stopping just short of his chin.

“Physics works!” Professor Lewin shouts. “And I’m still alive!”

Chasing rainbows hooked Mr. Boigon, the San Diego florist. He was vacationing in Hawaii when he noticed the rainbow outside his hotel every afternoon. Why were the colors always in the same order?

When he returned home, Mr. Boigon said in a telephone interview, he Googled rainbows. Within moments, he was whisked to M.I.T. Lecture Hall No. 26-100. Professor Lewin was in front of a few hundred students.

“All of you have looked at rainbows,” he begins. “But very few of you have ever seen one. Seeing is different than looking. Today we are going to see a rainbow.”

For 50 minutes, he bounds across the stage, writing equations on the blackboard and rhapsodizing about the “amazing” and “beautiful” physics of rainbows. He explains how the colors always appear in the same order because of how light refracts and reflects in the water droplets.

For the finale, he creates a rainbow by shining a bright light into a glass sphere containing a single drop of water.

“There it is!” Professor Lewin cries.

“Your life will never be the same,” he tells his students. “Because of your knowledge, you will be able to see way more than just the beauty of the bows that everyone else can see.”

“Professor Lewin was correct,” Mr. Boigon wrote in an e-mail message to a reporter. “He made me SEE ... and it has changed my life for the better!!”

“I had never taken a course in physics, or calculus, or differential equations,” he wrote to Professor Lewin. “Now I have done all that in order to be able to follow your lectures. I knew the name Isaac Newton, but nothing about Newtonian Mechanics. I had heard of the likes of Einstein, Galileo.” But, he added that he “didn’t have a clue on earth as to what they were all about.”

“I walk down the street analyzing the force of a boy on skateboard or the recoil of a carpenter using a nail gun,” he wrote. “Thank you with all my heart.”

MannyIsGod
11-15-2008, 04:35 PM
Dude thats bad ass. I'm opening up itunes as we speak.

baseline bum
11-15-2008, 05:42 PM
Dude thats bad ass. I'm opening up itunes as we speak.

MIT's OCW is one of the greatest things on the internet. I noticed you said you were going to do CS as a backup plan to meteorology some time ago. If so, check out this course below, also posted by MIT. It's an absolutely amazing class given by MIT professors to HP, and the textbook is both world-class and free.

http://groups.csail.mit.edu/mac/classes/6.001/abelson-sussman-lectures/

The first lecture is really amazing even if you only watch the first 10 minutes.

Jekka
11-15-2008, 08:28 PM
We've been talking a lot about open courseware in my information science program at UM - my Networked Computing class is all online and open for people that want to follow it: link (http://si502.com/).

UM's program isn't as developed as MIT's yet, but that's the goal. https://open.umich.edu/. The idea is really pretty cool, and I think it's awesome that universities are enabling people to have access to the course requirements and tools. It doesn't replace being there, but for someone at home that wants to learn, it (open courseware in general) is a bad ass resource to have.

ShoogarBear
11-15-2008, 10:57 PM
That's messed up. I paid how many thousands per year, and you unworthy peons get it for free? :madrun

E20
11-16-2008, 01:20 AM
That's messed up. I paid how many thousands per year, and you unworthy peons get it for free? :madrun

You were a Physics major, ShoogarBear?

DANILO DRASKOVIC
11-16-2008, 04:29 AM
That's messed up. I paid how many thousands per year, and you unworthy peons get it for free? :madrun

but we dont get the piece of paper at the end

ShoogarBear
11-16-2008, 08:20 AM
You were a Physics major, ShoogarBear?

Nah, Chemical Engineering.

E20
11-16-2008, 01:13 PM
Nah, Chemical Engineering.
Wow, same as my brother. Although I am a different science major I have to take a lot of of Physics and Chemistry classes so far for the lower level requirements.

baseline bum
11-17-2008, 01:30 AM
This guy's experiments are incredible. There's one experiment where he sets up a spray-paint can between two springs, pulls the can down, and lets it oscillate up and down while spraying paint as he drags a long piece of paper at a constant speed to show the graph of the can's position is a sine function. It makes so much more sense seeing that than just solving the differential equation given by Hooke's Law.

F = m*a = m * x''(t) = - k x(t)

http://img171.imageshack.us/img171/590/vlcsnap530974mf9.png

You can see it at about the 8:30 mark of the video below
http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Physics/8-01Physics-IFall1999/VideoLectures/detail/embed10.htm

baseline bum
11-17-2008, 02:12 PM
Damn... not too many people interested in physics? :(

No wonder our country is going down the toilet in comparison to countries like China and Japan where people like this kind of stuff.

Richard Cranium
11-17-2008, 02:16 PM
Physics is too boring to keep the young interested long enough.

baseline bum
11-17-2008, 02:19 PM
Physics is too boring to keep the young interested long enough.

There's nothing boring about physics. It's got to be one of the most interesting fields of study in the history of humankind, and has advanced our knowledge of our universe by an incredible amount in the past 350 years.

Jekka
11-17-2008, 02:23 PM
Damn... not too many people interested in physics? :(

No wonder our country is going down the toilet in comparison to countries like China and Japan where people like this kind of stuff.

I suck at physics - I tried, I really did. My brain does not function that way, which is also why I had to bust my ass to get through Python programming earlier this semester. I would actually love to be a physics nerd if I could pull it off, but alas ...

A good friend of mine was a physics major in undergrad and she's gone on to get her masters in computer science - and yet apparently her family is very upset that she's not pursuing a PhD in physics. I think a lot of it depends on what your family places value on. Physics may not be for everyone, but I bet more people would try if they were encouraged.

Richard Cranium
11-17-2008, 02:26 PM
There's nothing boring about physics. It's got to be one of the most interesting fields of study in the history of humankind, and has advanced our knowledge of our universe by an incredible amount in the past 350 years.

You are confusing "interesting" with "exciting" and while physics may be very "interesting" it doesn't excite today's youth enough to pursue it.

baseline bum
11-17-2008, 02:31 PM
You are confusing "interesting" with "exciting" and while physics may be very "interesting" it doesn't excite today's youth enough to pursue it.

Making discoveries about our universe should be exciting to Americans the way it is in other countries, but it sadly is not in our anti-intellectual culture.

Ed Helicopter Jones
11-17-2008, 04:20 PM
Very cool! I'm going to check it out!!

:tu

E20
11-17-2008, 04:41 PM
Physics is pretty boring when you have to sit down and do some mundane problems. But the concepts and theories are neat.

RandomGuy
11-17-2008, 05:57 PM
I am Randomguy and my avatar approves of this thread. :tu

baseline bum
11-17-2008, 08:20 PM
I suck at physics - I tried, I really did. My brain does not function that way, which is also why I had to bust my ass to get through Python programming earlier this semester. I would actually love to be a physics nerd if I could pull it off, but alas ...


That's OK. Chemistry was my nemesis in science, although I still loved the labs.

ShoogarBear
11-17-2008, 09:30 PM
Making discoveries about our universe should be exciting to Americans the way it is in other countries, but it sadly is not in our anti-intellectual culture.

About the worst thing you can be thought of in the U.S. is smart. Being smart is a reason for suspicion. I think it's mostly because people spend a lot of time making fun of others they think are dumb, and when they can't do that it makes them uncomfortable.

Jekka
11-17-2008, 09:33 PM
That's OK. Chemistry was my nemesis in science, although I still loved the labs.

I loved chemistry - although part of that could be that I spent a lot of time turning fire different colors. I'm using practical chemistry a lot now in my paper and film conservation classes. I think most sciences are more interesting once you actually get to apply them.

The sone
11-18-2008, 01:32 AM
I loved chemistry - although part of that could be that I spent a lot of time turning fire different colors. I'm using practical chemistry a lot now in my paper and film conservation classes. I think most sciences are more interesting once you actually get to apply them.

jekka smokes yarn...manny does too....ive been their pusher for about three years now...listen not little farmer man!!!!!

RandomGuy
11-18-2008, 10:10 AM
About the worst thing you can be thought of in the U.S. is smart. Being smart is a reason for suspicion. I think it's mostly because people spend a lot of time making fun of others they think are dumb, and when they can't do that it makes them uncomfortable.

Only idiots say things like that.

2Blonde
11-19-2008, 10:30 PM
I loved chemistry - although part of that could be that I spent a lot of time turning fire different colors. I'm using practical chemistry a lot now in my paper and film conservation classes. I think most sciences are more interesting once you actually get to apply them.
Chemistry Classes :td -----> Chemistry Labs :tu


That's OK. Chemistry was my nemesis in science, although I still loved the labs.

Once again.... Chemistry Classes :td -----> Chemistry Labs :tu



About the worst thing you can be thought of in the U.S. is smart. Being smart is a reason for suspicion. I think it's mostly because people spend a lot of time making fun of others they think are dumb, and when they can't do that it makes them uncomfortable.
Well my degree is Chemistry major & Biology minor but I didn't go that route because I was smart. I went for it because I had no plans to go on to post graduate studies & I figured if I was up against a person with a degree in Marketing, English, Fine Arts.etc. then I might come across as smarter/more well-qualified/harder worker with a BS degree in Chemistry. BTW, it worked like a charm.

DPG21920
11-20-2008, 02:28 AM
Dude thats bad ass. I'm opening up itunes as we speak.

I have never heard of Itunes U. Do you just log onto to Itunes and you will see it? Then search this guys name?

Edit: nvm, got it