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Physics explains everything from the beginning to the end of any complete description of the human body. Such a comprehensive discussion should begin with the basic structure of matter, as explained by quantum mechanics – the physics at small dimensions, and end with the mechanics of human motion, the energetics of metabolism, the fluid dynamics of blood flow through vessels, the mechanisms for speaking and hearing, and the optical imaging system we call the eye. All of required combinations of atoms to form the complex molecules and organs of organisms that live and reproduce can be explained by quantum mechanics; however, such explanations can get pretty complex. The fields. | Irving R Herman BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL PHYSICS BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING Physics of the Human Body 0 springer biological and medical physics biomedical engineering biological and medical physics biomedical engineering The fields of biological and medical physics and biomedical engineering are broad multidisciplinary and dynamic. They lie at the crossroads of frontier research in physics biology chemistry and medicine. The Biological and Medical Physics Biomedical Engineering Series is intended to be comprehensive covering a broad range of topics important to the study of the physical chemical and biological sciences. Its goal is to provide scientists and engineers with textbooks monographs and reference works to address the growing need for information. Books in the series emphasize established and emergent areas of science including molecular membrane and mathematical biophysics photosynthetic energy harvesting and conversion information processing physical principles of genetics sensory communications automata networks neural networks and cellular automata. Equally important will be coverage of applied aspects of biological and medical physics and biomedical engineering such as molecular electronic components and devices biosensors medicine imaging physical principles of renewable energy production advanced prostheses and environmental control and engineering. Editor-in-Chief Elias Greenbaum Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge Tennessee USA Editorial Board Masuo Aizawa Department of Bioengineering Tokyo Institute of Technology Yokohama Japan Olaf S. Andersen Department of Physiology Biophysics Molecular Medicine Cornell University New York USA Robert H. Austin Department of Physics Princeton University Princeton New Jersey USA James Barber Department of Biochemistry Imperial College of Science Technology and Medicine London England Howard C. Berg Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts USA Victor Bloomf ield .