The Periodic Kingdom: A Journey Into the Land Of the Chemical Elements
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Product Description
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #401656 in Books
- Published on: 1997-04-11
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: .45" h x 5.46" w x 8.00" l, .41 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 176 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com
The periodic table of the elements is the grand, unified theory of chemistry. In The Periodic Kingdom, P. W. Atkins imagines the table as a landscape, with fields of metals, pools of mercury and bromine, clouds of gases, and the offshore island of rare earths. He describes the history of this metaphoric kingdom and shows how its laws are those of physical chemistry: they are the expression in the visible world of the invisible dance of subatomic particles. The Periodic Kingdom is an excellent book for students at any level who want to see the connections between chemistry, physics, and "real life."
From Publishers Weekly
An extended metaphorical description of the periodic table of chemical elements is offered in this compact volume by Oxford chemist and author Atkins (Molecules, Physical Chemistry). The presentation presumes no scientific background. Likening the arrangement of the periodic table to a landscape and the sections denoting individual elements to geographic regions ("an imaginary kingdom, a land of chemists' dreams"), Atkins discusses in topographical analogies the elements' physical and chemical properties. Histories of the formation and discovery of elements and of the formulation of the periodic table itself are surveyed. Later chapters adroitly introduce the basics of atomic physical chemistry. The fantastical imagery, maintained throughout, conveys the author's passion for his subject. Unfortunately, it's remarkably tedious. This work deserves the esteem of connoisseurs of chemistry and perhaps of impressionable youth, yet seems unlikely to hold the attention of a more general audience. Illustrations.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Ingram
In science we learn that from 100 or so elements everything tangible is made, whether a planet or a microscopic organism. With vivid imagery, text cleverly arranged like a travel guide, and easy for the general reader to understand, Oxford's P.W. Atkins describes the organization of the kingdom of the elements, the history of its discovery, where the elements came from, and how each relates to another.
