Great Courses series on Nuclear Physics, Covers Strong and Weak Nuclear Forces, Alpha, Beta, and Gamma decay, Valley of Stability for Isotopes, Forces and Factors that explain stability and instability in the nucleus of an atom, the physics of nuclear weapons and nuclear power plants, Stellar nucleosynthesis, nuclear medicine, and radioactive dating techniques.
Nuclear Physics Explained was a decent look at the topic. The course is a somewhat typical offering from The Great Courses. This lecture series is 24 lectures; each ~30 mins.
Course Professor Lawrence Weinstein is a Professor of Physics at Old Dominion University (ODU) and a researcher at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. He received his undergraduate degree from Yale University and his doctorate in Physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Lawrence Weinstein:
I took this course over a few-week period. I made a few notes as I went. Unfortunately, I was not able to make notes on all the lectures. I'll go over the ones I did below.
Lecture 1 gets off to a good start, Weinstein enthusiastically delivers a decent introduction to the course; laying out an explanation of the four forces, briefly covering the periodic table, and talking about the "valley of stability".
In Lecture 2, Professor Weinstein jumps right in; getting very technical from the get-go. I don't feel that he spent the proper time here initiating the unfamiliar with the basic concepts of nuclear physics. This will likely lose many people in the woods. The information missing from this lecture can be found in the course guidebook. I think it should have been part of the course proper.
Lecture 3 does a good job of explaining radiation to the layperson. The lecture also features demonstrations by Professor Weinstein. Effective communication.
Lecture 5 continues talking about radiation. Professor Weinstein educates the viewer on the difference between ionizing and nonionizing radiation. He talks about cell phones, and power lines. He does this well here.
Lecture 7 talks about The Quantum Nucleus and Magic Numbers. Weinstein takes a sharp turn into the weeds here; rattling off extremely technical jargon that will likely see many listeners completely lost. This was a somewhat common theme in the course.
I did not make notes for lectures 8-24. The course becomes much more technical at this point, and Weinstein really dives into the specific details. He does talk about topics like nuclear fusion and carbon dating with some clarity, fortunately.
Sadly, a common problem with many of these courses is that they assume a level of scientific literacy that likely will not be there in the average viewer of this material. This course should have been made more accessible to the layperson. The prof could have spent just a bit more time educating the average viewer, who is likely unfamiliar with nuclear physics. This is a course to explain nuclear physics, after all... Unfortunately, many of these lectures don't bring the field of nuclear physics to the layperson in a manner that will be accessible.
So while the material presented here by Weinstein was interesting, and I felt he did a decent job with the course presentation, I am knocking off a few points for his lack of making the material more accessible. 3.5 stars.
I finally know how the sun works, and a whole lot more. I've learned the difference between fission and fusion and where all that energy is stored or released. I now have a clearer picture of the meaning of E=mc^2, How an MRI works, what carbon (and other isotopes) dating is, etc. It all makes sense.
What mankind has learned to do with the atom and what's been learned from it is simply amazing.
Pretty good survey course. Definitely intended for an audience with minimal science or engineering background. 24 pretty interesting lectures that begin with some insight into nuclear structure, particles and relationships and ending with applications of nuclear energy to power delivery and medicine. Along the way you get to see some of the devices (cyclotrons, colliders, etc) that are used to study nuclear energy as well as some of the real life devices used to deliver energy. All in all a pretty interesting course.