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Energy Systems
updated 30.Dec.2004
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Class Blog
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Acad. Advising
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How is energy created and harvested, stored and transformed, used and
abused? Energy Systems is a 2-3 quarter, intensive study of ways
energy is produced and changed. This is a good program
for students interested in physics or environmental studies, integrated
with mathematics. It starts with skill building and background
study, and finishes with major research projects related to energy.
Classes meet full time fall and winter. Students may continue
their research projects as a group contract in spring. For more information,
see the Program Description
and these webpages.
WINTER QUARTER: The first class meeting is Monday
3.Jan.2005 at 1:00 in Lab II Rm 2242.
Assignment for the first day: Get all of your
textbooks ordered and delivered by the first day
of class.
Review your calculus and physics learning from last quarter, especially
sines, differentiation, and thermal physics.
Questions? You can contact Dr. Zita by email <zita@evergreen.edu>, and/or
come to the Academic
Fair. Please include "Energy Systems" in your email subject header,
so the spam filter doesn't delete your email.
TEXTS: always get the
most recent edition available. Be sure to order texts in
advance from the publisher or another online source such as Powell's so you have them the first
day of class. The college bookstore will probably not have these
texts. Click on titles below for links to primary sources. You
can compare prices at Half.com or BestBuyBooks,
but for primary texts the linked publisher site is your best bet. Get
the seminar texts too!
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Energy and Earth texts to be
used all year:
Introduction
to Energy: Resources, Technology, and Society, 2d Ed, by Edward S.
Cassedy & Peter Z. Grossman, pub. Cambridge University Press;
(1998) ISBN: 0521 637678 (pdk)
Alternative
Energy: A Beginner's Guide to the Future of Energy Technology, by
Marek Walisiewicz, ed. John Gribbin, 2002, pub: Dorling Kindersley
Publishing (DK) Essential Science, ISBN: 0789489198
Conte et al., Earth Science:
An Integrated Perspective pub.Wm C. Brown, ISBN 0-697-279413 Earth Science Online
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Physics and Calculus texts
to be used all year:
You can order Physics and Calculus texts from
the publisher (both from Wiley) by clicking on the links below and
adding them to your shopping cart. If you want the optional supplements
recommended below, order them at the same time to save on shipping.
Always get the latest edition!
Fundamentals
of Physics, Extended (Vol.I and II), Seventh Edition, by Halliday,
Resnick, and Walker. Get two separate volumes so you don't have to
carry one big text around: ISBN 0-471-42959-7 and ISBN 0-471-42960-0
Single
Variable Calculus, 3rd ed., Hughes-Hallett, Gleason, McCallum, et
al., pub. John Wiley & Sons (2002), ISBN 0-471-44876-1 (get the
Course Advantage Edition, which includes supplemental learning tools).
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Strongly recommended, not
required:
Physics
supplements: Student Solutions Manual, and Student Companion
Calculus
supplements: Student Solutions Manual for Ch.1-20, and Student
Study Guide
Active
Learning Edition Sampler for Hughes-Hallett Calculus 3E, by Deborah
Hughes-Hallett (2002) ISBN: 0-471-25042-2 (If you have trouble ordering
this, don't worry about it.)
Optional, not required:
Renewable
Energy: Sources for Fuels and Electricity, by Henry Kelly, Amulya
K. N. Reddy, Thomsa B. Johansson, Pub. Island Pr (1992), ISBN
1559631384 (out of print?)
Prospects
for Sustainable Energy: A critical assessment, by Edward S.
Cassedy, Publisher: Cambridge University Press; (April 6, 2000) ISBN:
0521631203
The
Hydrogen Economy: The Creation of the Worldwide Energy Web and the
Redistribution of Power on Earth, by Jeremy Rifkin, pub: Jeremy P.
Tarcher; 1st Trade edition (August 1, 2003)
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SCIENCE SEMINAR
in Energy Systems
Seminar is a required component, closely
integrated into the Energy Systems program. Science
Seminar is also open to other interested students, who
may take Monday and/or Thursday sections, for 4 credits
each. Be sure to order texts in advance (Powell's,
Amazon, or your favorite online source) so you
have them the first day of class. The college
bookstore will probably not have them; Orca Books
downtown may have some copies. Always get the most recent
edition available. While there may be copies of some
texts on closed reserve in the Library, you must bring
your own copy to class each day. Take notes
in the margins as you read, and the text becomes a record
of your developing thoughts. "An unmarked text is an
unread text." See Seminar
Syllabus for meeting details. Seminar meets 5:00-6:30
pm.
WINTER SEMINAR
on Electromagnetism and the Sun's effects
on Earth.
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Monday Seminar: Electromagnetism
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Thursday Seminar: The
Sun's effects on Earth
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REQUIRED TEXT:
Tesla: Master of Lightning,
by Margaret Cheney and Robert Uth, 2001, Publisher:
MetroBooks
(NY), ISBN: 158663187X, or 21st Century Books,
ISBN: 0-7607-1005-8, PBS
site
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Storms
from the Sun, by Michael J. Carlowicz and
Ramon E. Lopez, pub 2002 Joseph Henry Press, ISBN
0-309-07642-0
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Your required second "text" is actually
kit of electromagnetism equipment to experiment
with in class. Order your kit
at the link below, or get one downtown at Wind
Up Here toystore, to save shipping costs.
Call 1-800-531-2616 or email
to reserve your kit.
Required: Electromagnetic
Science Set ($25)
Also required:
4 D-cell flashlight batteries
flashlight bulb, paper clips, masking tape
Phillips screwdriver, 2 feet of string or thread
scissors, spoon, three drinking straws
heavy duty foil or metal tube with 2 cm inner
diam.
paper, magazines,dollar bill, nickel, five pennies
Optional: Electromagnetix
Lab ($10), available at Hobbytron
or ToyMagnets.
We can supplement these kits with Lab Stores equipment.
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The
Role
of the Sun in Climate Change, by Douglas V.
Hoyt and Kenneth H. Shatten, 1997, Publisher: Oxford
University Press; ISBN: 019509414X |
Interesting texts we also considered
for Monday Seminar - not required: Empires
of Light: Edison, Tesla, Westinghouse, and
the Race to Electrify the World, by Jill Jonnes,
2003, Publisher: Random House; ISBN: 0375507396
Hidden Attraction: the History
and Mystery of Magnetism, by Gerrit Verschuur The
Northern Lights, by Lucy Jago, 2002, Publisher:
Vintage, ISBN: 0375708820 Energy
and Power (Young Discoverers: Environmental
Facts and Experiments), by Rosie Harlow, Sally
Morgan, 2002, Publisher: Kingfisher; ISBN: 0753455021
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FALL QUARTER Energy Systems: The first class
meeting is Monday 27 Sept. at 1:00 in Lab II Rm 2242.
Assignment for the first day: Get all
of your textbooks ordered and delivered
by the first day of class.
Refresh your pre-calculus understanding by reviewing your favorite
text.
FALL SEMINAR on oil, hydrogen, and the possible
impacts of alternatives. See Seminar
Syllabus for meeting details. Seminar meets 5:00-6:30
pm.
Monday Seminar - Oil and
alternatives
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Thursday Seminar - Hydrogen
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The
End of Oil: On the Edge of a Perilous New World,
by Paul Roberts, pub. Houghton Mifflin Co; (2004)
ISBN: 0618239774 |
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Tomorrow's
Energy: Hydrogen, Fuel Cells, and the Prospects
for a Cleaner Planet, by Peter Hoffmann, pub. MIT
Press (2002) ISBN: 026258221X |
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Power
to the People: How the Coming Energy Revolution
Will Transform an Industry, Change Our Lives, and
Maybe Even Save the Planet, by Vijay V. Vaitheeswaran,
pub. Farrar Straus & Giroux (2003) ISBN: 0374236755
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The
Hype About Hydrogen: Fact and Fiction in the Race
to Save the Climate by Joseph J. Romm, pub. Island
Press (2004) ISBN: 155963703X |
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SPRING SEMINAR - YOUR IDEAS? email zita@evergreen.edu,
with Seminar Suggestion in subject header
Seminar text ideas for sometime in the future:
The
Fusion Quest, by T Kenneth Fowler
The Solar Economy, by Hermann Scheer
The Solar Fraud: Why Solar Energy Won't Run the World, by Howard
C. Hayden
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Links: Energies
1997-98; Beug's 2002 Energy
program (lots of good links), CAL =
Computer Applications Lab
NASA's poop-powered
fuel cells; Union of Concerned
Scientists on Clean Energy
End of Oil: Mother
Jones review and interview; NPR
interview;
Sun:: Early solar
minimum? Solar pathfinder
measures sunlight at your location
Climate change: M&M links
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