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  1. The Mathematics of High School Physics.Nikos Kanderakis - 2016 - Science & Education 25 (7-8):837-868.
    In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, mathematicians and physical philosophers managed to study, via mathematics, various physical systems of the sublunar world through idealized and simplified models of these systems, constructed with the help of geometry. By analyzing these models, they were able to formulate new concepts, laws and theories of physics and then through models again, to apply these concepts and theories to new physical phenomena and check the results by means of experiment. Students’ difficulties with the mathematics of (...)
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  • Scale models, similitude and dimensions: Aspects of mid-nineteenth-century engineering science.Thomas Wright - 1992 - Annals of Science 49 (3):233-254.
    This paper examines the type of theory used to justify the application of physical scale modelling to the solution of mid-nineteenth century engineering problems. To do this, it discusses three particular examples: the initial Britannia Bridge breaking experiments of E. Hodgkinson, the vibrating railway bridge experiments of R. Willis and G. G. Stokes; and the ship resistance experiments of W. Froude. The theory invoked in these case histories is viewed against the background of the response of the contemporary engineering community (...)
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  • What is the Meaning of the Physical Magnitude ‘Work’?Nikos Kanderakis - 2014 - Science & Education 23 (6):1293-1308.
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