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Brian J. Ford

    Brian J. Ford è un biologo ricercatore, autore e docente, noto per le sue pubblicazioni di divulgazione scientifica e per opere televisive selezionate. Il suo lavoro si concentra sulla divulgazione scientifica e sulla resa accessibile di complessi concetti biologici a un vasto pubblico. Attraverso i suoi testi e le sue lezioni, si impegna a suscitare interesse per la conoscenza scientifica e a promuovere il pensiero critico. Il suo contributo risiede nella capacità di comunicare scoperte scientifiche in modo chiaro e avvincente.

    Geheime alliierte Waffen
    Tools, methods and languages for scientific and engineering computation
    Wunderwerk Mensch
    Problem solving environments for scientific computing
    101 Questions about Science
    Secret weapons
    • Secret weapons

      • 288pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      Powerful illustrations and a unique new narrative make this an incomparable illustrated history of the secret weapons that changed the course of World War II. The book's basic structure is chronological, charting the race in technology between the Allied and Axis powers, with examples of their use in battle, along with those that remained experimental or remained the stuff of science fiction. Importantly (and of interest to the general reader) it also shows how wartime research anticipated the high-tech era in which we now live. The account charts secret weapons development from the Japanese ray gun of the 1930s to the powerful V2 rocket, and compares World War II secret weapons research with the realities of present-day science. It's a riveting story of innovation under pressure, from a world of machine guns and biplanes to electronics, rockets, and nuclear bombs with the power to wipe out humanity.

      Secret weapons
    • Hardbound. The aim of this conference was to investigate the motivation for and development of Problem Solving Environments (PSEs) for Scientific Computing. The meeting was interdisciplinary, including experts in Physics, Chemistry, Oceanography, Biology and fields of Engineering, as well as authorities in Software Engineering, Numerical Software Construction, Computing Science, Computational Mathematics and Statistics. Whilst some Working Conferences are essentially review meetings in the course of the development of a particular field, it is evident that focussed consideration of problem solving environments for many people started with this meeting.

      Problem solving environments for scientific computing