Popular physics book on why materials behave the way they do.This fascinating book presents in a completely non-technical way one of the greatest achievements of physics this century: why is it the materials we can see and touch behave in the way that they do. Beginning with the ideas of quantum mechanics, which seem quite alien to everyday experience, but which nevertheless govern the behaviour of all matter, the author is able to explain the variety of properties of materials: how they bend and break, their colours, how they transmit heat and electricity, why magnets and superconductors have the properties they do, and how all these properties can be traced back to the atoms of which they are composed.This fascinating book presents in a completely non-technical way one of the greatest achievements of physics this century: why is it the materials we can see and touch behave in the way that they do. Beginning with the ideas of quantum mechanics, which seem quite alien to everyday experience, but which nevertheless govern the behaviour of all matter, the author is able to explain the variety of properties of materials: how they bend and break, their colours, how they transmit heat and electricity, why magnets and superconductors have the properties they do, and how all these properties can be traced back to the atoms of which they are composed.This fascinating book explains why the materials we can see and touch behave as they do. In a completely nontechnical style, using only basic arithmetic, the author explains how the properties of materials result from the way they are composed of atoms and why it is they have the properties they do: for example, why copper and rubies are colored, why metals conduct heat better than glass, why magnets attract an iron nail but not a brass pin, and how superconductors are able to conduct electricity without resistance. The book is intended for general readers, and uses mainly words, pictures and analogies, with only a minimum of ló&