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Pop and Snap Electronics Kit
Childrens ELECTRONICS KIT:
299 Circuits, including a real working Radio!
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Our Electrolab Pop N Snap electronics kit
from the University of Cambridge range of Science & Education
learning toys makes an ideal gift for the more inquisitive
child, encouraging learning through playing and sparking
the imagination. Using simple pop-stud type connections,
building circuits is completely safe and easy - no soldering
necessary. The University of Cambridge has produced
some of the best scientists of all time, from Isaac Newton
and Darwin, to Stephen Hawking, and you can be sure that
they have only given their name to these great science sets
because they truly reflect the University's unrivalled reputation
for scientific achievement and excellence. Suitable for
7-16 years old. |
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Electrolab 'Pop N Snap'
Learn about electricity, its invisible power and its
importance in everyday life. Experiment and create numerous
circuits. This comprehensive electronics kit includes
everything needed to make and test your own circuits
or those suggested.
The work sheets show you exciting activites, providing
a great introduction to the world of advanced electronics.
Build and learn as you perform 299 exciting electronic
circuits, including electric motor controls, light effects,
sound effects, radios and much, much more.
Suitable for 7-16 years old and above
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Electronics
Lab Features:
- Great introduction
to the world of electronics
- No soldering
necessary - popper-type connectors make it safe and
easy for operation
- Build
and learn as you perform 299
exciting experiments safely and easily!
- Completely
safe!
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Famous Scholars: Ernest Rutherford In 1895,
JJ Thomson, discoverer of the electron, appointed a young
Ernest Rutherford as one of his first graduate students
at the Cavendish Laboratory. In 1898 Rutherford left Cambridge
and spent the next twenty years establishing a world-class
reputation with his pioneering work on the structure of
the atom. In 1919 he was the obvious choice to take over
from Thompson at the Cavendish, where he created an outstanding
team of scientists who furthered his work in nuclear physics.
Many groundbreaking discoveries emerged from the Cavendish
under Rutherford's direction, in particular Chadwick's work
on the neutron. In 1932, John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton
first split the atom. |
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