List of episodes of the series «Why Is It So?»
- Seasons count: 3
- Episodes count: 46
Release date: 1/1/1970
The Idea of the Center of Gravity
- Episode number: 1
- Episode description: All of the weight of an object is at its center of gravity, says Miller. However, the center of gravity is not always at a point on the object. This leads to a few amazing balancing acts based on one principle: an odd-shaped system can stay in balance when its center of gravity is below the point of support.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Newton's First Law of Motion-Inertia
- Episode number: 2
- Episode description: Newton's First Law has two parts, and Professor Miller does his best to teach them together. His demonstrations include familiar magic tricks, such as the board under a sheet of newspaper.
Release date: 1/1/1970
3. Newton's Second Law of Motion – The Elevator Problem
- Episode number: 3
- Episode description: F=ma is the standard shorthand for Newton's Second Law. But Professor Miller shows more depth, using two toy cars accelerating toward each other. He also expands F=ma into W=mg for falling bodies on Earth.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Newton's Third Law of Motion – Momentum
- Episode number: 4
- Episode description: The Earth must recoil when Professor Miller jumps. It's the first of many illustrations that confirm, ""To every action there is always an equal and contrary reaction.""
Release date: 1/1/1970
Energy and Momentum
- Episode number: 5
- Episode description: From the outset, Miller emphasizes the difference between energy and momentum, first with the toy cars and then with a steel ball running a track. Miller then introduces the various kinds of energy.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Concerning Falling Bodies and Projectiles
- Episode number: 6
- Episode description: Laws of motion and energy, discussed in earlier programs, converge in the real and virtual demonstrations Miller does on falling bodies and projectile motion. One principle says that horizontal motion does not affect vertical motion.
Release date: 1/1/1970
The Simple Pendulum and Other Oscillating Things
- Episode number: 7
- Episode description: Anything can be a pendulum, says Professor Miller, and anything can oscillate. In fact, the period of a pendulum depends only on its length. Miller sets up demonstrations of various oscillating nodies. He also presents a puzzle about springs.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Adventures with Bernoulli
- Episode number: 8
- Episode description: A family of 120 bore the name Bernoulli, and they were all geniuses. Miller points out how the Bernoulli principle affects our everyday lives: why two ships must not pass too closely on the sea, how a stream of air can suspend a ball above it, and many other things.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Soap Bubbles and Soap Films
- Episode number: 9
- Episode description: Miller's experiments on soap films show the pressure on soap bubbles, plus the fact that soap films always form a surface of least energy.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Atmospheric Pressure – The Properties of Gases
- Episode number: 10
- Episode description: The atmosphere exerts an enormous force (15 pounds of pressure per square inch). Miller crushes steel cans, ruptures rubber, and breaks a wood plank with the atmosphere on his side.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Centrifugal Force and Other Strange Matters
- Episode number: 11
- Episode description: Miller writes ""centrifugal"" in quotation marks because there is no force acting radially on rotating bodies. Balls, candles, hoops, and weights experience torques of which Miller says little.
Release date: 1/1/1970
The Strange Behavior of Rolling Things
- Episode number: 12
- Episode description: All hoops roll alike, says Miller, and all disks beat all hoops when they race downhill. Thus Miller sends disks, hooops, and spheres rolling.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Archimedes' Principle
- Episode number: 13
- Episode description: When a body is submerged in a liquid, it buoys up with a force equal to the weight of the liquid displaced. Miller shows this with a very clever set up involving cylinders submerged in water. He also points out a little of Archimedes' finest achievements. His greatest? Finding the ratio of volumes between a sphere, a cone, and a cylinder of equal height.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Pascal's Principle – The Properties of Liquids
- Episode number: 14
- Episode description: Blaise Pascal said liquids are incompressible. Any force exerted on a liquid is felt in all parts of the liquid without lessening of the force. Miller uses a pulley system to drive home that fact.
Release date: 1/1/1970
Levers, Inclined Planes, Geared-Wheels and Other Simple Machines
- Episode number: 15
- Episode description: With a great many tools before him, Professor Miller sets out to prove that all tools and machines are linked to the two simplest: the lever and the inclined plane.