All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 The Idea of the Center of Gravity

    • January 1, 1969
    • PBS

    All of the weight of an object is at its center of gravity, says Miller. However, the center of gravity is not always at a point on the object. This leads to a few amazing balancing acts based on one principle: an odd-shaped system can stay in balance when its center of gravity is below the point of support.

  • S01E02 Newton's First Law of Motion

    • PBS

    Newton's First Law has two parts, and Professor Miller does his best to teach them together. His demonstrations include familiar magic tricks, such as the board under a sheet of newspaper.

  • S01E03 Newton's Second Law of Motion

    • PBS

    F=ma is the standard shorthand for Newton's Second Law. But Professor Miller shows more depth, using two toy cars accelerating toward each other. He also expands F=ma into W=mg for falling bodies on Earth.

  • S01E04 Newton's Third Law of Motion

    • PBS

    The Earth must recoil when Professor Miller jumps. It's the first of many illustrations that confirm, ""To every action there is always an equal and contrary reaction.""

  • S01E05 Energy and Momentum

    • PBS

    From the outset, Miller emphasizes the difference between energy and momentum, first with the toy cars and then with a steel ball running a track. Miller then introduces the various kinds of energy.

  • S01E06 Concerning Falling Bodies and Projectiles

    • PBS

    Laws of motion and energy, discussed in earlier programs, converge in the real and virtual demonstrations Miller does on falling bodies and projectile motion. One principle says that horizontal motion does not affect vertical motion.

  • S01E07 The Simple Pendulum and Other Oscillating Things

    • PBS

    Anything can be a pendulum, says Professor Miller, and anything can oscillate. In fact, the period of a pendulum depends only on its length. Miller sets up demonstrations of various oscillating nodies. He also presents a puzzle about springs.

  • S01E08 Adventures with Bernoulli

    • PBS

    A family of 120 bore the name Bernoulli, and they were all geniuses. Miller points out how the Bernoulli principle affects our everyday lives: why two ships must not pass too closely on the sea, how a stream of air can suspend a ball above it, and many other things.

  • S01E09 Soap Bubbles and Soap Films

    • PBS

    Miller's experiments on soap films show the pressure on soap bubbles, plus the fact that soap films always form a surface of least energy.

  • S01E10 Atmospheric Pressure - The Properties of Gases

    • PBS

    The atmosphere exerts an enormous force (15 pounds of pressure per square inch). Miller crushes steel cans, ruptures rubber, and breaks a wood plank with the atmosphere on his side.

  • S01E11 Centrifugal Force and Other Strange Matters

    • PBS

    Miller writes ""centrifugal"" in quotation marks because there is no force acting radially on rotating bodies. Balls, candles, hoops, and weights experience torques of which Miller says little.

  • S01E12 The Strange Behavior of Rolling Things

    • PBS

    All hoops roll alike, says Miller, and all disks beat all hoops when they race downhill. Thus Miller sends disks, hooops, and spheres rolling.

  • S01E13 Archimedes' Principle

    • PBS

    When a body is submerged in a liquid, it buoys up with a force equal to the weight of the liquid displaced. Miller shows this with a very clever set up involving cylinders submerged in water. He also points out a little of Archimedes' finest achievements. His greatest? Finding the ratio of volumes between a sphere, a cone, and a cylinder of equal height.

  • S01E14 Pascal's Principle - The Properties of Liquids

    • PBS

    Blaise Pascal said liquids are incompressible. Any force exerted on a liquid is felt in all parts of the liquid without lessening of the force. Miller uses a pulley system to drive home that fact.

  • S01E15 Levers, Inclined Planes, Geared-Wheels and Other Simple Machines

    • PBS

    With a great many tools before him, Professor Miller sets out to prove that all tools and machines are linked to the two simplest: the lever and the inclined plane.

Season 2

  • S02E01 The Ideas of Heat and Temperature

    • PBS

    From the outset, Miller distinguishes heat from temperature. Objects of the same temperature can have different amounts of heat.

  • S02E02 Thermometric Properties and Processes

    • PBS

    What evidence do we have that poiny yo a change in tremperature of objects? Miller suggests these properties: expansion, electrical resistance, magnetism, thermoelectric power, and color.

  • S02E03 How to Produce Heat Energy

    • PBS

    Professor Miller rattles off several types of energy, and adds that heat energy is a degenerate form. Whenever work is done, heat is a by-product. Thus Miller takes a nail out with a hammer, pumps a bicycle pump, slides a string around the neck of a perfume bottle and bends a paper clip to generate small amounts of heat.

  • S02E04 Thermal Expansion of Stuff - Solids

    • PBS

    The classic ball-and-ring experiment leads to dilemmas involving metal plates with tiny holes in them. This and other demonstrations go unresolved, entirely according to Miller's instructional philosophy.

  • S02E05 Thermal Expansion of Stuff - Gases and Liquids

    • PBS

    Gases and liquids have strange expansion properties, depending on the change in temperature. But Miller is a strange and enchanting physicist. He does experiments with freely-expanding gases.

  • S02E06 The Strange Thermal Behavior of Ice and Water

    • PBS

    To carry one gram of ice water to one gram of water vapor, says Miller, requires a good deal of energy. Miller has abundant demonstrations on ice and water. In some of these demonstrations, a bit of ice melts and refreezes.

  • S02E07 Heat Energy Transfer by Conduction

    • PBS

    In this first of three shows on transferring heat energy, Miller proposes some unusual things. Much of it involves the imagination of viewers.

  • S02E08 Heat Energy Transfer by Convection

    • PBS

    Miller shows the strange fact that damp air is lighter than dry air. He also reflects on a hub of different metals and how one can show the rates at which metals conduct heat away. His most fascinating fact: there are three times ten to the nineteenth power molecules of gas in one cubic centimeter of air.

  • S02E09 Heat Energy Transfer by Radiation

    • PBS

    Radiation of heat can travel at the speed of light, but how quickly an object can radiate heat, is another matter.

  • S02E10 Some Extraordinary Adventures (Evaporation, Boiling, Freezing)

    • PBS

    Miller has a grand demonstration in which he freezes water by boiling it at a rather low pressure.

  • S02E11 Some Miscellaneous and Wondrous Adventures in the Subject of Heat

    • PBS

    Miller again crushes a steel can by first lowering its pressure and then pouring ice water over it. Using a block of dry ice and a silver coin, he hints to the Trevelyan rocker. A good deal of time is devoted to the viscosity of liquids and gases.

  • S02E12 The Drama in Real Cold Stuff - Liquid Nitrogen

    • PBS

    All manner of objects are frozen in liquid nitrogen, and their properties change in startling ways. A balloon shrinks in volume (Boyle's Law); a metal coil supports a weight. And of course, lots of other things get broken, from a flower to rubber balls.

  • S02E13 Physics of Toys: Mechanical

    • PBS

    Perhaps no other physicist played with toys more than Prof. Miller. And Miller played with toys to find out ""Why is it so?"" In this first of three programs on the physics of toys, Miller recounts principles learned in Episodes 1, 6, and 8. His toys include a walking Pluto dog, a circus smokestack, and a unicyclist (which Miller calls a ""monocyclist"").

  • S02E14 Physics of Toys: Acoustic and Thermal

    • PBS

    Miller goes to his collection of acoustic toys: a button on a string, a bird whistle, a xylophone, and an accordion among them. Some of the principles in these toys will go into Miller's programs the next season.

  • S02E15 Physics of Toys: Electrostatic, Magnetic and Miscellaneous

    • PBS

    Miller concludes his physics of toys lecture with toys of all categories. The physics involved in each would take a good half-hour to disclose. He includes a a gyroscopic toy, a musical top, and the dunking duck.

Season 3

  • S03E01 Waves: Kinds and Properties

    • PBS

    ""What is a wave?"" is a simple question that is not easy to answer. Miller wishes to answer the question by showing different kinds of waves. But it is the class of acoustic waves that will be the major subject of the next six programs.

  • S03E02 Sound Waves - Sources of Sound

    • PBS

    For sound to be heard, there has to be something to compress. Miller vibrates metal, tears cloth, and blows streams of air through holes to discuss the propagation of sound waves.

  • S03E03 Vibrating Bars & Strings - The Phenomenon of Beats

    • PBS

    Miller excites musical bars and tuning forks to demonstrate beats, a disruptive musical aspect. When he holds a vibrating bar at the nodes, the bar still vibrates. And he holds a vibrating string to demonstrate harmonics and overtones.

  • S03E04 Resonance - Forced Vibrations

    • PBS

    Every vibrating body has a a corresponding frequency and pitch. Miller uses tuning forks that resonate with sounding pipes and vibrating strings.

  • S03E05 Sounding Pipes

    • PBS

    Miller excites pipes by driving air through them and heating them. The most enchanting element comes from heating pipes with wire screens lodged in them. He calls it ""filling them with music."" The physics of thermally excited pipes is difficult to understand, but a joy to hear.

  • S03E06 Vibrating Rods and Plates

    • PBS

    Miller strikes rods at the beginning of the program, creating different nodes depending on where he holds the bar. Then comes his artistic masterpiece: vibrating plates sprinkled with sand and bowed with a bow. Wonderful artistic designs result from that bowing.

  • S03E07 Miscellaneous Adventures in Sound

    • PBS

    Miller has set up a Blackburn pendulum. At its bottom is a funnel which he fills with salt and lets go at a certain position. The funnel swerves around, and the falling sand produces Lissajous figures.

  • S03E08 Electrostatic Phenomena: Foundations of Electricity

    • PBS

    From a simple observation of attraction between a charged rod and small bits of matter, comes all our knowledge of electrostatics and electricity. Miller charges objects by conduction and induction.

  • S03E09 Adventures with Electric Charges

    • PBS

    The Van Der Graaf Generator is the focus of this program. Miller sets up an astonishing set of demonstrations, such as the ""Mad Professor's Hair.""

  • S03E10 Adventures in Magnetism

    • PBS

    Everything is magnetic to more or less degree, says Miller. He suggests making an iron bar a magnet just by aligning it properly and striking it at one end. Then he introduces the electromagnet. And just how strong is a magnetic force? It's a puzzler.

  • S03E11 Ways to 'Produce' Electricity

    • PBS

    One does not produce electricity. It is abundant around us. Miller simply shows ways electricity can be seen or do work. Miller makes a voltaic cell, explaining that lead plates in storage batteries are not all lead. He also sheds light (literally) on electromagnetic induction.

  • S03E12 Properties and Effects of Electric Currents

    • PBS

    Miller reproduces Hans Christian Oersted's experiment that showed electricity produces magnetism. Then Miller also copper-plates a small lead slab in a solution of copper sulfate amd cooks a hot dog on an electric system.

  • S03E13 Adventures in Electromagnetism

    • PBS

    Miller reproduces Faraday's experiment that led to electromagnetic induction. More powerful is the experiment on an electric charge.

  • S03E14 Further Adventures in Electromagnetism

    • PBS

  • S03E15 Miscellaneous and Wondrous Things in Electricity and Magnetism

    • PBS