
I'm a simple emigrant and I love physics
After finishing school I took it as an elective exam and wanted to enroll in nanophysics, but there wasn't a group formed there, and I went into this IT thing, even before it became mainstream. But that's not what this is about. The other day I accidentally observed a scene: at a big party (so to speak) in a small town in Germany, the name of which could be used as a speech-therapy exercise, three generations participated. There were many people, so a beer tap with a keg of beer was installed; in the photo — this setup. And a three-year-old boy watched attentively as endless beer flowed from the tap. A grandfather came to help him, who clearly explained how, under pressure, beer from the keg rises through a tube and ends up in the tap, and then is poured into glasses. The child's eyes instantly lit up with the gleam of discovery. And I thought, well, it's all logical—here it is, physics for German children. If it were taught in the same interesting and practical way in all schools, perhaps there would be more people who understand and love physics. And you, are you afraid of physics? Share your physics discoveries in the comments. #curiosities