Commentary Lecture Two: The Chemical History of a Candle - Brightness of the Flame

Ғылым және технология

Bill Hammack & Don DeCoste highlight the key points of Lecture Two of Michael Faraday’s lectures on The Chemical History of a Candle. A free companion book helps modern viewers understand each lecture - details at www.engineerguy.com - as does this commentary track and closed captions for each lecture.
►Free Companion book to this video series
www.engineerguy.com/faraday
Text of Every Lecture | Essential Background | Guides to Every Lecture | Teaching Guide & Student Activities
In these lectures Michael Faraday’s careful examination of a burning candle reveals the fundamental concepts of chemistry, while at the same time superbly demonstrating the scientific method. In this lecture Faraday reveals why a candle’s flame is bright. To do this he investigates the properties of the flame.
LINKS TO OTHER VIDEOS IN THIS SERIES
► Lectures
(1/6) Introduction to Michael Faraday’s Chemical History of a Candle
• Introduction: The Chem...
(2/6) Lecture One: A Candle: Sources of its Flame
• Lecture One: The Chemi...
(3/6) Lecture Two: Brightness of the Flame
• Lecture Two: The Chemi...
(4/6) Lecture Three: Products of Combustion
• Lecture Three: The Che...
(5/6) Lecture Four: The Nature of the Atmosphere
• Lecture Four: The Chem...
(6/6) Lecture Five: Respiration & its Analogy to the Burning of a Candle
• Lecture Five: The Chem...
► Bonus Videos: Lectures with Commentary
Lecture One: A Candle: Sources of its Flame (Commentary version)
• Commentary Lecture One...
Lecture Two: Brightness of the Flame (Commentary version)
• Commentary Lecture Two...
Lecture Three: Products of Combustion (Commentary version)
• Commentary Lecture Thr...
Lecture Four: The Nature of the Atmosphere (Commentary version)
• Commentary Lecture Fou...
Lecture Five: Respiration & its Analogy to the Burning of a Candle (Commentary version)
• Commentary Lecture Fiv...
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COMPANION BOOK DETAILS
The companion book is available as an ebook, in paperback and hardcover - and for free as a PDF. Details on all versions are at www.engineerguy.com/faraday
Michael Faraday’s The Chemical History of a Candle
with Guides to the Lectures, Teaching Guides & Student Activities
Bill Hammack & Don DeCoste
190 pages | 5 x 8 | 14 illustrations
Hardcover (Casebound) | ISBN 978-0-9838661-8-0 | $24.95
Paper| ISBN 978-1-945441-00-4| $11.99
eBook | ISBN 978-0-9839661-9-7 | $3.99
Audience: 01 - General Trade
Subjects
SCI013000 SCIENCE / Chemistry / General
SCI028000 SCIENCE / Experiments & Projects
SCI000000 SCIENCE / General
EDU029030 EDUCATION / Teaching Methods & Materials / Science & Technology
This book introduces modern readers to Michael Faraday’s great nineteenth-century lectures on The Chemical History of a Candle. This companion to the KZread series contains supplemental material to help readers appreciate Faraday’s key insight that “there is no more open door by which you can enter into the study of science than by considering the physical phenomena of a candle.” Through a careful examination of a burning candle, Faraday’s lectures introduce readers to the concepts of mass, density, heat conduction, capillary action, and convection currents. They demonstrate the difference between chemical and physical processes, such as melting, vaporization, incandescence, and all types of combustion. And the lectures reveal the properties of hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide, including their relative masses and the makeup of the atmosphere. The lectures wrap up with a grand, and startling, analogy: by understanding the chemical behavior of a candle the reader can grasp the basics of respiration. To help readers understand Faraday’s key points this book has an “Essential Background” section that explains in modern terms how a candle works, introductory guides for each lecture written in contemporary language, and seven student activities with teaching guides.
Author Bios
Bill Hammack is a Professor of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Illinois-Urbana, where he focuses on educating the public about engineering and science. He is the creator and host of the popular KZread channel engineerguyvideo.
Don DeCoste is a Specialist in Education in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Illinois-Urbana, where he teaches freshmen and pre-service high school chemistry teachers. He is the co-author of four chemistry textbooks.

Пікірлер: 11

  • @osmium6832
    @osmium68326 жыл бұрын

    I don't feel that the lycopodium or the sulfuric acid demonstrations were particularly redundant and I'm glad it was decided to include them in the video. Attention was drawn to the sound that the powder makes to show that the combustion is not happening all at once. The sulfuric acid gives an example of a flame that arises from a mixture of several room temperature chemicals. In the case of candles and all other combustion up to that point, they were started from another flame using direct heat. The theatrical nature of the demonstrations is a bonus.

  • @r.b.4611
    @r.b.46117 жыл бұрын

    6:30 It should always be described this way around, Faraday had it right. Explaining it this way mimics the actual process of asking questions and trying to discover the answer. It's much better at conveying the scientific method, rather than getting the answer first and then having it explained. I mean if you have the answer already, why care about the process of finding out how you got the answer? You don't need the process anymore, you have the damn answer!

  • @MorallyUnacceptable
    @MorallyUnacceptable7 жыл бұрын

    I find it oddly disconcerting that they talk about Faraday like they're watching his lecture, but the video shows Bill acting it out.

  • @josebrihuega8889

    @josebrihuega8889

    7 жыл бұрын

    It would really be great to have a video of Faraday himself, but KZread isn't (yet) a time machine.

  • @randomdude6719
    @randomdude67192 жыл бұрын

    6:12 watched this in Chem class the other day and couldn’t stop laughing. Looks the the guy from trailer park boys

  • @astronot1997
    @astronot19977 жыл бұрын

    7:20 Gunpowder is not in a reaction of oxygen, gunpowder itself is a mixture of fuel and oxidizer.

  • @chowdryzakirhussain6415
    @chowdryzakirhussain64155 жыл бұрын

    Nice

  • @nhandao8836
    @nhandao88367 жыл бұрын

    second

  • @serbear0691

    @serbear0691

    4 ай бұрын

    third

  • @habeang304
    @habeang3047 жыл бұрын

    first like again XD

  • @jonathansalazar5100
    @jonathansalazar51006 жыл бұрын

    "Watch how we see faraday" lol why cant they just say in faradays teachings or faradays experiments shows this. When bill is looking at himself call himself faraday is weird and distracting.

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