The question of how falling cats land on their feet has long intrigued humans. In this playful and eye-opening history, physicist and cat parent Gregory Gbur explores how attempts to understand the cat-righting reflex have provided crucial insights into puzzles in mathematics, geophysics, neuroscience, and human space exploration.
The result is an engaging tumble through physics, physiology, photography, and robotics to uncover, through scientific debate, the secret of the acrobatic performance known as cat-turning, the cat flip, and the cat twist. Readers learn the solution but also discover that the finer details still inspire heated arguments. As with other cat behavior, the more we investigate, the more surprises we discover.
"Even cats obey the laws of nature. In this engrossing book, Greg Gbur uses cats' mysterious ability to land on their feet to explore how physics works in the real world."--Sean Carroll, author of Something Deeply Hidden: Quantum Worlds and the Emergence of Spacetime
"When the shelves in the science section of bookstores groan under the weight of tomes concerning String Theory and the Higgs Boson, this extremely well-written popular science book concerning such a human-scale problem is refreshing."--James Kakalios, author of The Physics of Superheroes