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Nano: The Spectacular Science of the Very (Very) Small

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Nano: The Spectacular Science of the Very (Very) Small by Jess Wade, and Melissa Castrillón

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By Jess Wade, and and, Melissa Castrillón

avg rating

16 reviews

Reviews

22 Aug 2023

the book talked abot everything made up of atoms. it talked about facts like graphene an elphnt can walk on it and it wont break.

14 Aug 2023

It was really interesting and i loved it and i would recommend it to someone else

10 Aug 2023

The book interested in me because scientist, only often use the word Nano nano means tiny like a ant!

08 Jul 2023

Good introduction to the science of nano materials although I would have liked a mention of more than graphene. Solid science for the under tens.

16 Dec 2022

I'm maybe a bit young for this, I'm 6 years old but I understood some of it.

02 Sep 2022

It was interesting to learn about graphene

02 Sep 2022

Fatual ok read

27 Aug 2022

IT WAS AMAZING I love science and nano stuffs. It has so many facts. I would recommend Nano.

19 Aug 2022

This non-fiction book helped me understand the role that atoms play in our daily lives.

13 Aug 2022

Because it had the different materials in it and the atoms - I liked those.

09 Aug 2022

I loved learning about graphene & how it was see through & strong enough to hold an elephant. It’s like magic.

09 Aug 2022

This is a non fiction book. I thought this book was really interesting. I liked the fact about scientists making super sieves.( please note that hyper sieves do not yet exist). The book tells us about things that are nano. Which means it tells us about very very very small things, such as ants and atoms and
DNA. Did you know there are 11 elements in the human body.

08 Aug 2022

I liked finding out about atoms because it makes me a young scientist, which is very exciting because it makes me AN ACTUAL SCIENTIST!!!!!

06 Aug 2022

I liked this book because of the science subject matter. If you look at the colour-coded atom key on page 9, the illustrator Melissa Castrillón only uses the colours of the 6 atoms in the key (hydrogen, oxygen, sodium, chlorine, aluminium and carbon) in the entire book. I like the facts in this book, especially the one about graphene and an elephant on pages 14 and 15. I would recommend this book to anyone who likes science.

05 Aug 2022

Okay so it was a great book for science and nanos ( which means very very small) and chemists is discovering how to create something strong as steel but is soft and bendy but the reason why I give it a 3 is because there was a lot of complicated words to understand but overall it’s fantastic.

01 Aug 2022

I learnt a lot about Nanotechnology! Very exciting to think what will be in use in the next century or less.

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