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Particle Physics Brick by Brick

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Using LEGO® blocks to create a uniquely visual and clear depiction of the way our universe is put together. This is the perfect introduction to the enigmatic and fascinating world of Quantum Physics.

Our story starts with the Big Bang, and along the way, the constructs and interactions within and among atoms and sub-atomic particles, and the forces that play upon them, are clearly explained, with each LEGO® block representing a different atomic or sub-atomic particle. The different colours and size denote what that particle is and its relationship with the other 'building blocks'.

Each chapter is presented in digestible chunks, using toy building blocks to illustrate the ideas and experiments that have led to some of the biggest discoveries of the past 150 years.

Soon you'll be able to construct every element in the Universe using a box of LEGO® and this book!

176 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 21, 2017

23 people are currently reading
274 people want to read

About the author

Ben Still

7 books13 followers
Ben is currently Honorary Research Fellow at Queen Mary, University of London and also teaches physics to 13-18 years old students. For years Ben has enjoyed sharing his passion for physics and the scientific method through his writing, collaborations with artists, and live performances. He is a multi award winning science communicator who has enjoyed national recognition for his work in the field. Although Ben's research interests lie primarily in the field of particle physics he relishes communicating many complex science topics to all audiences through metaphor, interactivity, and clear graphics.

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5 stars
52 (33%)
4 stars
61 (39%)
3 stars
31 (20%)
2 stars
8 (5%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews
Profile Image for WiseB.
230 reviews
October 18, 2018
I have long been looking for a book that can provide me the particle physics knowledge so as to supplement my quest in quantum theory learning. This book exactly serves the purpose. Although using lego bricks is the primary mean the author articulated and explained the subject, I believe one can easily transform the explanation to one's preferred form of interpretation. Regardless of the usage of bricks, the illustrations, diagrams and design throughout using colors and notations really help the mind to digest all these facts on particles, which to be frank is not any easy task for one without strong background in this domain.
The contents of the book is structured in a good way to bring one progressively from the building blocks (of the Standard Model) and the different kinds of forces & fields, to how these interact with each others. The closing of the book also include pointers to unsolved problems like dark matter, dark energy and beyond Standard Model (i.e. energy exceeding Planck scale) extension ... including Super-Symmetry (S particles) and String Theory.
Profile Image for Kevin.
41 reviews5 followers
February 14, 2019
What an amazing and inspired book this is. While the Lego brick analogy has its limitations, Ben Still uses it to great effect to explain a subject that is not easily explained. The explanations are clear and concise, and easily digested. You don't need to buy any Lego bricks to understand the book but having some to hand does help.

If you are a novice when to comes to this subject matter then you could do a lot worse than this book to learn about it. Quantum physics has never been so much fun.
3 reviews
January 16, 2019
Really interesting and great format. I am a 15 year old who is really into particle and quantum physics and I love how complex ideas were explained.
Profile Image for Kaylee.
304 reviews8 followers
January 1, 2021
I wish a book like this was around when I was a physics undergrad! Using Lego bricks helps to make weird, foreign things like quarks more familiar and approachable. The book does a good job of explaining the current story of what humans know about the wacky ways of subatomic particles. It gives a big picture of particle physics concepts without getting bogged down in math. This is not light reading, but it's easier to digest than, say, the Wikipedia article on quantum chromodynamics. I learned plenty. And to the book designer: I loved the glossary and Standard Model cheat-sheet on the cover flaps.
Profile Image for Merenwen.
422 reviews
June 14, 2018
The idea of using plastic bricks to explain particle physics is ingenious. I wish a book like this had been around when I was high school-aged. I do think the glossary could have been a little more thorough, though. I had to look in the index for some things, and the book never explains what the "N" in "NeV" means. (I'm guessing it's "nano".) Still, this is a pretty good book. I hope I can retain most of the information.
Profile Image for Peter.
268 reviews4 followers
May 18, 2019
My Lego-fan son checked this out, but it was rather beyond his 10yo grasp. So I read it on a lazy Saturday. It fits right in with the other popular physics book I own or have read.
Profile Image for Nick Silin.
3 reviews
February 21, 2022
Oh, boy... LEGO bricks on the cover is a click bait, it gives false assumption that this book is an easy ride. It certainly requires some engineering background to read it. What to say, I was reading it on lazy Saturdays sheet by sheet dedicating enough time to try understanding. Well, at the end I think I understood I think at most 70% and remembered 10% 😁 but, at the end I enjoyed the book pretty much, because it is a great source of thoughts and explanation that humanity is far from understanding our Universe and there are plenty of things to discover left for curios minds
79 reviews3 followers
October 16, 2024
Definitely a must have book if you are curious about how our world is made of, based on the more advanced theory we have, the Standard Model.
The particle zoo is well described, with highlights on the several properties involved and even on open questions at the edge of current research.
4 and not 5 stars only because a point of improvement could have been to roughly describe the more important experiments which helped in consolidating the zoo.
2 reviews
July 1, 2020
It's a good book and very informative. Though, you should have some basic understanding on the matter. It's kind of a tough read.

The frontpage is a little bit misleading since it can give the impression that it's a book for curious youth's. I wouldn't say that's the case. I wouldn't say that this book is written for physics-rookies as i initially thought.
Profile Image for James Kinsley.
Author 4 books28 followers
May 7, 2022
I got about two thirds through before realising I was just looking at words. The more I read, the less i understood. No fault of the book's, which is well written and nicely laid out.

I will say, however, that the Lego angle is a complete red herring. Other than rendering the illustrations familiar, they add nothing to the explanation. Just a gimmick, sadly.
Profile Image for Kevin de Ataíde.
652 reviews11 followers
May 10, 2023
A useful introduction to basic particle physics and quantum physics. The whole building elements from bricks thing on the book cover is something of a lie. Unless you want to sit with sacks of lego bricks and build all the necessary particles for a few months/years. But the analogy is very clever, and an electron neutrino (for example) is forever going to appear in my mind as a lego brick now.
Profile Image for Alex Linschoten.
Author 13 books147 followers
February 19, 2018
Visually engaging and well presented. The text itself has a lot of typos and doesn't seem really aligned with the audience who are looking for explanation in lego blocks. Which is to say, it doesn't really explain things from the basics/fundamentals. But not the worst book of its kind at all...
1 review
April 16, 2019
Really enjoyed this. To be honest not read anything about particle physics before but this was a good introduction and the added brick diagrams really helped.

I’m far from an expert after reading this but at least I understand some of the concepts discussed in the Big Bang theory now 😂
9 reviews
August 11, 2020
Really good read and it explains all the “basics” of particle physics really well.
Wouldn’t say it’s for a complete physics rookie but particle physics isn’t for a complete rookie; so I honestly don’t think any book on particle physics could be.
Profile Image for skein.
591 reviews37 followers
Read
July 30, 2023
congratulations! it’s cute.

i expected it to have a fair amount of gimmick, but this exceeded my expectations: it is almost all the way there! even the stuff i understand didn’t make sense. even “what is an atom? what is a nucleus?” didn’t make sense.
Profile Image for Joseph Matuch.
120 reviews2 followers
March 9, 2024
My sons love this book. There are, obviously, very few particle physics books out there that capture the imagination of elementary school students. Not sure how much they understand — because a lot went over my head — but it was interesting nevertheless.
764 reviews4 followers
August 23, 2018
Despite the clever use of colorful bricks to illustrate the concepts presented, this is no casual read. It requires quite close attention and concentration. Good luck!
6 reviews1 follower
January 11, 2019
I don't know if using Lego really adds illumination to the subject; at times, it felt forced. Even so, the material was organized and explained well; a bit repetitive at times.
Profile Image for Karla.
1,668 reviews15 followers
February 11, 2019
Wow

Very interesting read

Recommended for high school physics students
Profile Image for Declan Raven.
4 reviews2 followers
Read
September 1, 2023
Makes something as complicated as particle physics super simple and easy to understand!
Profile Image for Bethany.
64 reviews1 follower
October 20, 2025
Particle Physics but in such a visual clear way! (Well as much as quantum physics can be 😅)
Profile Image for Venks.
18 reviews2 followers
January 24, 2021
The book has seven chapters. The author makes a bold claim to explain atomic and subatomic physics using Lego blocks. Unfortunately, the author falls far short.

The first chapter is interesting and I learned a lot. If that was the end of the book, I would have given it 5 stars. But we wouldn’t have touched upon many other theories necessary. And that’s where the author fails miserably in using the Lego blocks. Soon into the third chapter, the author was writing for an audience of one - himself.

All in all, it’s not a great book other than the first chapter. I would recommend reading that one.
Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews

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