How do you make a thunderstorm in the lecture hall? How do you make things float and why do rockets fly into space? With amazing experiments, this show demonstrates the physical forces that hold the world together and how you can outsmart them.
We make natural phenomena such as rainbows or clouds come to life in the lecture hall. In this way we learn in an entertaining way how they work and how we can control them. This goes so far that at the end we make a roll of thunder that sounds like music to the ears, and not just to physicists.
How do you make a thunderstorm in the lecture hall? How do you make things float and why do rockets fly into space? With amazing experiments, this show demonstrates the physical forces that hold the world together and how you can outsmart them.
We make natural phenomena such as rainbows or clouds come to life in the lecture hall. In this way we learn in an entertaining way how they work and how we can control them. This goes so far that at the end we make a roll of thunder that sounds like music to the ears, and not just to physicists.
How do you make a thunderstorm in the lecture hall? How do you make things float and why do rockets fly into space? With amazing experiments, this show demonstrates the physical forces that hold the world together and how you can outsmart them.
We make natural phenomena such as rainbows or clouds come to life in the lecture hall. In this way we learn in an entertaining way how they work and how we can control them. This goes so far that at the end we make a roll of thunder that sounds like music to the ears, and not just to physicists.
How do you make a thunderstorm in the lecture hall? How do you make things float and why do rockets fly into space? With amazing experiments, this show demonstrates the physical forces that hold the world together and how you can outsmart them.
We make natural phenomena such as rainbows or clouds come to life in the lecture hall. In this way we learn in an entertaining way how they work and how we can control them. This goes so far that at the end we make a roll of thunder that sounds like music to the ears, and not just to physicists.