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"").
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.
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.