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{{Short description|Scientific field of study}}
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[[Image:Meissner effect zoom.jpg|thumb|200px|right|A [[magnet]] levitating above a [[high-temperature superconductor]] demonstrates the [[Meissner effect]].]]
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[[Image:Military laser experiment.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Experiment using a (likely [[argon]]) [[laser]]]]
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{{TopicTOC-Physics}}


'''Physics''' is the [[scientific]] study of [[matter]], its [[Elementary particle|fundamental constituents]], its [[motion]] and behavior through [[space]] and [[time]], and the related entities of [[energy]] and [[force]].<ref name="maxwell1878-physicalscience">{{harvnb|Maxwell|1878|p=9}} "Physical science is that department of knowledge which relates to the order of nature, or, in other words, to the regular succession of events."</ref> Physics is one of the most fundamental scientific disciplines.<ref name="youngfreedman2014p1">{{harvnb |Young|Freedman|2014|p=1}} "Physics is one of the most fundamental of the sciences. Scientists of all disciplines use the ideas of physics, including chemists who study the structure of molecules, paleontologists who try to reconstruct how dinosaurs walked, and climatologists who study how human activities affect the atmosphere and oceans. Physics is also the foundation of all engineering and technology. No engineer could design a flat-screen TV, an interplanetary spacecraft, or even a better mousetrap without first understanding the basic laws of physics. (...) You will come to see physics as a towering achievement of the human intellect in its quest to understand our world and ourselves."</ref><ref name="youngfreedman2014p2">{{harvnb |Young|Freedman|2014|p=2}} "Physics is an experimental science. Physicists observe the phenomena of nature and try to find patterns that relate these phenomena."</ref><ref name="holzner2003-physics">{{harvnb|Holzner|2006|p=7}} "Physics is the study of your world and the world and universe around you."</ref> A scientist who specializes in the field of physics is called a [[physicist]].
'''Physics''' (Greek: [[physis]] – φύσις meaning "nature") is the [[natural science]] which examines basic concepts such as [[mass]], [[charge]], [[matter]]<ref name = "feynman">[[R. P. Feynman]], [[R. B. Leighton]], [[Matthew Sands|M. Sands]] (1963), ''[[The Feynman Lectures on Physics]]'', ISBN 0-201-02116-1 Hard-cover. p.1-1 Feynman begins with the [[atomic theory|atomic hypothesis]], as his most compact statement of all scientific knowledge: "If, in some cataclysm, all of scientific knowledge were to be destroyed, and only one sentence passed on to the next generations ..., what statement would contain the most information in the fewest words? I believe it is ... that ''all things are made up of atoms – little particles that move around in perpetual motion, attracting each other when they are a little distance apart, but repelling upon being squeezed into one another. ...''" vol. '''I''' p. I–2</ref> and its [[Motion (physics)|motion]] and all that derives from these, such as [[energy]], [[force]], and [[spacetime]].<ref>
[[James Clerk Maxwell]] (1878), [http://books.google.com/books?id=noRgWP0_UZ8C&printsec=titlepage&dq=matter+and+motion&source=gbs_summary_r&cad=0 ''Matter and Motion'']. New York: D. Van Nostrand. p.1: "Nature of Physical Science – Physical science is that department of knowledge which relates to the order of nature." | accessdate=2008-11-04
</ref> More broadly, it is the general analysis of [[nature]], conducted in order to understand how the [[world]] and [[universe]] behave. But as most people know, physics is in fact: not real. The greatests scientists of the world have come together in a summit to determine how it is "Gnomes" in fact the ones responsible for physics ( the real world) <ref>H.D. Young & R.A. Freedman, ''University Physics with Modern Physics'': 11th Edition: International Edition (2004), Addison Wesley. Chapter 1, section 1.1, page 2 has this to say: "Physics is an ''experimental'' science. Physicists observe the phenomena of nature and try to find patterns and principles that relate these phenomena. These patterns are called physical theories or, when they are very well established and of broad use, physical laws or principles." </br> Steve Holzner, ''Physics for Dummies'' (2006), Wiley. Chapter 1, page 7 says: "Physics is the study of your world and the world and universe around you." See [http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0764554336 Amazon Online Reader: Physics For Dummies (For Dummies(Math & Science))], retrieved 24 Nov 2006</ref><ref>Note: The term 'universe' is defined as everything that physically exists: the entirety of space and time, all forms of matter, energy and momentum, and the physical laws and constants that govern them. However, the term 'universe' may also be used in slightly different contextual senses, denoting concepts such as the [[cosmos]] or the [[world (philosophy)|philosophical world]].</ref>


Physics is one of the oldest academic disciplines, perhaps the oldest through its inclusion of [[astronomy]].<ref>Evidence exists that the earliest civilizations dating back to beyond 3000BC, such as the [[Sumer]]ians, [[Ancient Egyptians]], and the [[Indus Valley Civilization]], all had a predictive knowledge and a very basic understanding of the motions of the Sun, Moon, and stars.</ref> Over the last two millennia, physics had been considered synonymous with [[philosophy]], [[chemistry]], and certain branches of [[mathematics]] and [[biology]], but during the [[Scientific Revolution]] in the 16th century, it emerged to become a unique modern science in its own right.<ref>[[Francis Bacon]]'s 1620 ''Novum Organum'' was critical in the [[History of scientific method|development of scientific method]].</ref> However, in some subject areas such as in [[mathematical physics]] and [[quantum chemistry]], the boundaries of physics remain difficult to distinguish.
Physics is one of the oldest [[academic discipline]]s.<ref name="krupp2003">{{harvnb |Krupp|2003}}</ref> Over much of the past two millennia, physics, [[chemistry]], [[biology]], and certain branches of mathematics were a part of [[natural philosophy]], but during the [[Scientific Revolution]] in the 17th century, these natural sciences branched into separate research endeavors.{{efn|[[Francis Bacon]]'s 1620 ''{{lang|la|[[Novum Organum]]}}'' was critical in the [[History of scientific method|development of scientific method]].<ref name="Cajori1917">{{harvnb |Cajori|1917|pp=48–49}}</ref>}} Physics intersects with many [[interdisciplinarity|interdisciplinary]] areas of research, such as [[biophysics]] and [[quantum chemistry]], and the boundaries of physics are not rigidly defined. New ideas in physics often explain the fundamental mechanisms studied by other sciences<ref name="youngfreedman2014p1" /> and suggest new avenues of research in these and other academic disciplines such as mathematics and philosophy.


Physics is both significant and influential, in part because advances in its understanding have often translated into new technologies, but also because new ideas in physics often resonate with the other sciences, mathematics and philosophy. For example, advances in the understanding of [[electromagnetism]] led directly to the development of new products which have dramatically transformed modern-day society (e.g., television, computers, and domestic appliances); advances in [[thermodynamics]] led to the development of motorized transport; and advances in [[mechanics]] inspired the development of [[calculus]].
Advances in physics often enable new [[technology|technologies]]. For example, advances in the understanding of [[electromagnetism]], [[solid-state physics]], and [[nuclear physics]] led directly to the development of technologies that have transformed modern society, such as television, computers, [[domestic appliance]]s, and [[nuclear weapon]]s;<ref name="youngfreedman2014p1" /> advances in [[thermodynamics]] led to the development of industrialization; and advances in [[mechanics]] inspired the development of [[calculus]].
[[File:CMB_Timeline300_no_WMAP.jpg|upright=1.8|thumb|right|The expansion of the universe according to the [[Big Bang]] theory in physics]]


==Introduction==
==History==
{{seealso|List of basic physics topics|List of basic science topics}}
{{Main|History of physics}}
The word ''physics'' comes from the [[Latin]] {{lang|la|physica}} ('study of nature'), which itself is a borrowing of the [[Greek language|Greek]] {{lang|grc|φυσική}} ({{transliteration|grc|phusikḗ}} 'natural science'), a term derived from {{lang|grc|φύσις}} ({{transliteration|grc|phúsis}} 'origin, nature, property').<ref name="etymonline-physics">{{cite web |title=physics |website=[[Online Etymology Dictionary]] |url=http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=physics&allowed_in_frame=0|access-date=1 November 2016 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20161224191507/http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=physics&allowed_in_frame=0 |archive-date=24 December 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="etymonline-physic">{{cite web |title=physic |website=[[Online Etymology Dictionary]] |url=http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=physic&allowed_in_frame=0 |access-date=1 November 2016 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20161224173651/http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=physic&allowed_in_frame=0 |archive-date=24 December 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="LSJ">{{LSJ|fu/sis|φύσις}}, {{LSJ|fusiko/s|φυσική}}, {{LSJ|e)pisth/mh|ἐπιστήμη|ref}}</ref>


===Scope and Aims===
=== Ancient astronomy ===
{{Main|History of astronomy}}
[[Image:Pahoeoe fountain original.jpg|thumb|left|150px|This [[parabola]]-shaped [[lava flow]] illustrates [[Galileo]]'s [[law of falling bodies]] as well as [[blackbody radiation]] – you can tell the temperature from the color of the blackbody.]]
[[File:Senenmut-Grab.JPG|thumb|right|upright=1.8|Ancient [[Egyptian astronomy]] is evident in monuments like the [[Astronomical ceiling of Senemut Tomb|ceiling of Senemut's tomb]] from the [[Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt]].]]
[[Image:Casa-72l.jpg|thumb|right|150px|[[Cassiopeia A]] – a [[sphere|spherically]] [[symmetry|symmetric]] remnant of the 1680 [[supernova]]]]
[[Astronomy]] is one of the oldest [[natural science]]s. Early civilizations dating before 3000&nbsp;BCE, such as the [[Sumer]]ians, [[ancient Egypt]]ians, and the [[Indus Valley Civilisation]], had a predictive knowledge and a basic awareness of the motions of the Sun, Moon, and stars. The stars and planets, believed to represent gods, were often worshipped. While the explanations for the observed positions of the stars were often unscientific and lacking in evidence, these early observations laid the foundation for later astronomy, as the stars were found to traverse [[great circle]]s across the sky,<ref name="krupp2003"/> which could not explain the positions of the [[planet]]s.


According to [[Asger Aaboe]], the origins of Western astronomy can be found in [[Mesopotamia]], and all Western efforts in the [[exact science]]s are descended from late [[Babylonian astronomy]].<ref name ="aaboe1991">{{harvnb |Aaboe|1991}}</ref> [[Egyptian astronomy|Egyptian astronomers]] left monuments showing knowledge of the constellations and the motions of the celestial bodies,<ref name="clagett1995">{{harvnb |Clagett|1995}}</ref> while Greek poet [[Homer]] wrote of various celestial objects in his ''[[Iliad]]'' and ''[[Odyssey]]''; later [[Greek astronomy|Greek astronomers]] provided names, which are still used today, for most constellations visible from the [[Northern Hemisphere]].<ref name="thurston1994">{{harvnb |Thurston|1994}}</ref>
Physics covers a wide range of phenomena, from the smallest [[Subatomic particle|sub-atomic particle]]s, to the largest [[Galaxy|galaxies]]. Included in this are the very most basic objects from which all other things are composed of, and therefore physics is sometimes said to be the "fundamental science".<ref name = "Feynman lectures">''[[The Feynman Lectures on Physics]]'' Volume I. Feynman, Leighton and Sands. ISBN 0-201-02115-3 See Chapter 3 : "The Relation of Physics to Other Sciences" for a general discussion. For the philosophical issue of whether other sciences can be "reduced" to physics, see [[reductionism]] and [[special sciences]]).</ref>


=== Natural philosophy ===
Physics aims to describe the various phenomena that occur in nature in terms of simpler phenomena. Thus, physics aims to both connect the things we see around us to root causes, and then to try to connect these causes together in the hope of finding an [[Theory of Everything|ultimate reason]] for why nature is as it is. For example, the [[History of China|ancient Chinese]] observed that certain rocks ([[lodestone]]) were attracted to one another by some invisible force. This effect was later called [[magnetism]], and was first rigorously studied in the 17th century. A little earlier than the Chinese, the [[Ancient Greece|ancient Greeks]] knew of other objects such as [[amber]], that when rubbed with fur would cause a similar invisible attraction between the two. This was also first studied rigorously in the 17th century, and came to be called [[electricity]]. Thus, physics had come to understand two observations of nature in terms of some root cause ([[electricity]] and [[magnetism]]). However, further work in the 19th century revealed that these two forces were just two different aspects of one force – [[electromagnetism]]. This process of "unifying" forces [[Electroweak interaction|continues today]] (see section ''[[#Current research|Current research]]'' for more information).
{{main|Natural philosophy}}
[[Natural philosophy]] has its origins in [[Greece]] during the [[Archaic Greece|Archaic period]] (650 BCE – 480 BCE), when [[Presocratics|pre-Socratic philosophers]] like [[Thales]] rejected [[Methodological naturalism|non-naturalistic]] explanations for natural phenomena and proclaimed that every event had a natural cause.<ref name="singer2008p35">{{harvnb |Singer|2008|p=35}}</ref> They proposed ideas verified by reason and observation, and many of their hypotheses proved successful in experiment;<ref name="lloyd1970pp108-109">{{harvnb |Lloyd|1970|pp=108–109}}</ref> for example, [[atomism]] was found to be correct approximately 2000 years after it was proposed by [[Leucippus]] and his pupil [[Democritus]].<ref name="about-atomism">
{{cite web |last=Gill |first=N. S. |title=Atomism – Pre-Socratic Philosophy of Atomism |url=http://ancienthistory.about.com/od/presocraticphiloso/p/Atomism.htm |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140710140657/http://ancienthistory.about.com/od/presocraticphiloso/p/Atomism.htm |archive-date=10 July 2014 |access-date=1 April 2014 |publisher=[[About.com|About Education]] }}</ref>


=== Aristotle and Hellenistic physics ===
===The scientific method===
[[File:Aristotle Altemps Inv8575.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Aristotle]]<br/>(384–322 [[BCE]])]]
Physics uses the [[scientific method]] to test the validity of a physical theory, using a methodical approach to compare the implications of the theory in question with the associated conclusions drawn from experiments and observations conducted to test it. Experiments and observations are to be collected and matched with the predictions and hypotheses made by a [[theory]], thus aiding in the determination or the validity/invalidity of the theory.
During the [[Classical Greece|classical period]] in Greece (6th, 5th and 4th centuries BCE) and in [[Hellenistic civilization|Hellenistic times]], [[natural philosophy]] developed along many lines of inquiry. [[Aristotle]] ({{langx|el|Ἀριστοτέλης}}, ''Aristotélēs'') (384–322 BCE), a student of [[Plato]],
wrote on many subjects, including a substantial treatise on "[[Physics (Aristotle)|Physics]]"&nbsp;– in the 4th century BC. [[Aristotelian physics]] was influential for about two millennia. His approach mixed some limited observation with logical deductive arguments, but did not rely on experimental verification of deduced statements. Aristotle's foundational work in Physics, though very imperfect, formed a framework against which later thinkers further developed the field. His approach is entirely superseded today.


He explained ideas such as [[motion (physics)|motion]] (and [[gravity]]) with the theory of [[classical elements|four elements]].
Theories which are very well supported by data and have never failed any empirical test are often called [[scientific law]]s, or natural laws. Of course, all theories, including those called scientific laws, can always be replaced by more accurate, generalized statements if a disagreement of theory with observed data is ever found.<ref>Some principles, such as [[Newton's laws of motion]], are still generally called "laws" even though they are now known to be limiting cases of newer theories. Thus, for example, in [[Thomas Brody]] (1993, Luis de la Peña and Peter Hodgson, eds.) ''The Philosophy Behind Physics'' ISBN 0-387-55914-0, pp 18–24 (Chapter 2), explains the 'epistemic cycle' in which a student of physics discovers that physics is not a finished product but is instead the process of creating [that product].</ref>
Aristotle believed that each of the four classical elements (air, fire, water, earth) had its own natural place.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Daily 40 no. 2 – Aristotle and the Four Simple Bodies and Elements |website=Cal State LA |url=https://www.calstatela.edu/sites/default/files/dept/chem/09summer/158/daily40-aristotle.pdf |access-date=27 September 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230106231001/https://www.calstatela.edu/sites/default/files/dept/chem/09summer/158/daily40-aristotle.pdf |archive-date=6 January 2023 }}</ref> Because of their differing densities, each element will revert to its own specific place in the atmosphere.<ref>{{Cite web |last=tbcaldwe |title=Natural Philosophy: Aristotle {{!}} Physics 139 |date=14 October 2012 |url=https://blogs.umass.edu/p139ell/2012/10/14/natural-philosophy-aristotle/ |access-date=17 December 2022 |language=en-US}}</ref> So, because of their weights, fire would be at the top, air underneath fire, then water, then lastly earth. He also stated that when a small amount of one element enters the natural place of another, the less abundant element will automatically go towards its own natural place. For example, if there is a fire on the ground, the flames go up into the air in an attempt to go back into its natural place where it belongs. His laws of motion included: that heavier objects will fall faster, the speed being proportional to the weight and the speed of the object that is falling depends inversely on the density object it is falling through (e.g. density of air).<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Aristotle |url=https://galileoandeinstein.phys.virginia.edu/lectures/aristot2.html |access-date=17 December 2022 |website=galileoandeinstein.phys.virginia.edu}}</ref> He also stated that, when it comes to violent motion (motion of an object when a force is applied to it by a second object) that the speed that object moves, will only be as fast or strong as the measure of force applied to it.<ref name=":1" /> The problem of motion and its causes was studied carefully, leading to the philosophical notion of a "[[unmoved mover|prime mover]]" as the ultimate source of all motion in the world (Book 8 of his treatise ''[[Physics (Aristotle)|Physics]]'').


=== Theory and experiment===
=== Medieval European and Islamic ===
{{main|European science in the Middle Ages|Physics in the medieval Islamic world}}
{{main|Theoretical Physics|Experimental Physics}}
[[Image:Astronaut-EVA.jpg|thumb|100px|right|The astronaut and Earth are both in [[free-fall]]]]
[[Image:PrismAndLight.jpg|thumb|100px|right|[[Dispersion (optics)|Dispersion]] of [[light]] by a [[prism]]]]
[[Image:Lightning in Arlington.jpg|thumb|right|100px|[[Lightning]] is [[electric current]]]]


The [[Western Roman Empire]] fell to invaders and internal decay in the fifth century, resulting in a decline in intellectual pursuits in western Europe. By contrast, the Eastern Roman Empire (usually known as the [[Byzantine Empire]]) resisted the attacks from invaders and continued to advance various fields of learning, including physics.{{sfn|Lindberg|1992|page=363}}
The culture of physics has a higher degree of separation between [[theory]] and [[experiment]] than many other sciences. Since the twentieth century, most individual physicists have specialized in either [[theoretical physics]] or [[experimental physics]]. In contrast, almost all the successful theorists in [[biology]] and [[chemistry]] (e.g. American [[quantum chemistry|quantum chemist]] and [[biochemistry|biochemist]] [[Linus Pauling]]) have also been experimentalists, although this is changing as of late.


In the sixth century, [[Isidore of Miletus]] created an important compilation of [[Archimedes]]' works that are copied in the [[Archimedes Palimpsest]].
Theorists seek to develop [[mathematical model]]s that both agree with existing experiments and successfully predict future results, while experimentalists devise and perform experiments to test theoretical predictions and explore new phenomena. Although theory and experiment are developed separately, they are strongly dependent upon each other. Progress in physics frequently comes about when experimentalists make a discovery that existing theories cannot explain, or when new theories generate experimentally testable predictions, which inspire new experiments. In the absence of experiment, theoretical research can go in the wrong direction; this is one of the criticisms that has been leveled against [[M-theory]], a popular theory in high-energy physics for which no practical experimental test has ever been devised. Physicists who work at the interplay of theory and experiment are often called [[Phenomenology (science)|phenomenologists]].


In sixth-century Europe [[John Philoponus]], a Byzantine scholar, questioned [[Aristotle]]'s teaching of physics and noted its flaws. He introduced the [[theory of impetus]]. Aristotle's physics was not scrutinized until Philoponus appeared; unlike Aristotle, who based his physics on verbal argument, Philoponus relied on observation. On Aristotle's physics Philoponus wrote:<blockquote>But this is completely erroneous, and our view may be corroborated by actual observation more effectively than by any sort of verbal argument. For if you let fall from the same height two weights of which one is many times as heavy as the other, you will see that the ratio of the times required for the motion does not depend on the ratio of the weights, but that the difference in time is a very small one. And so, if the difference in the weights is not considerable, that is, of one is, let us say, double the other, there will be no difference, or else an imperceptible difference, in time, though the difference in weight is by no means negligible, with one body weighing twice as much as the other<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://homepages.wmich.edu/~mcgrew/philfall.htm | title=John Philoponus, Commentary on Aristotle's Physics | access-date=15 April 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160111105753/http://homepages.wmich.edu/~mcgrew/philfall.htm | archive-date=11 January 2016 | url-status=dead }}</ref></blockquote>Philoponus' criticism of Aristotelian principles of physics served as an inspiration for [[Galileo Galilei]] ten centuries later,<ref name="dialogTwoNewSciences">{{cite book |last=Galileo | authorlink= Galileo | date=1638 |title=[[Two New Sciences]] |quote=in order to better understand just how conclusive Aristotle's demonstration is, we may, in my opinion, deny both of his assumptions. And as to the first, I greatly doubt that Aristotle ever tested by experiment whether it be true that two stones, one weighing ten times as much as the other, if allowed to fall, at the same instant, from a height of, say, 100 cubits, would so differ in speed that when the heavier had reached the ground, the other would not have fallen more than 10 cubits.<br />Simp. – His language would seem to indicate that he had tried the experiment, because he says: We see the heavier; now the word see shows that he had made the experiment.<br />Sagr. – But I, Simplicio, who have made the test can assure[107] you that a cannon ball weighing one or two hundred pounds, or even more, will not reach the ground by as much as a span ahead of a musket ball weighing only half a pound, provided both are dropped from a height of 200 cubits.}}</ref> during the [[Scientific Revolution]]. Galileo cited Philoponus substantially in his works when arguing that Aristotelian physics was flawed.{{sfn|Lindberg|1992|page=162}}<ref>{{Cite book| chapter-url=https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/philoponus/| title=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy| chapter=John Philoponus| publisher=Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University| year=2018| access-date=11 April 2018| archive-date=22 April 2018| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180422010906/https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/philoponus/| url-status=live}}</ref> In the 1300s [[Jean Buridan]], a teacher in the faculty of arts at the [[University of Paris]], developed the concept of impetus. It was a step toward the modern ideas of inertia and momentum.<ref>{{Cite book| chapter-url=https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/buridan/| title=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy| chapter=John Buridan| publisher=Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University| year=2018| access-date=11 April 2018| archive-date=22 April 2018| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180422012611/https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/buridan/| url-status=live}}</ref>
[[Theoretical physics]] is closely related to [[mathematics]], which provides the language of physical theories, and large areas of mathematics, such as [[calculus]], have been invented specifically to solve problems in physics. [[Theorist]]s may also rely on [[numerical analysis]] and [[simulation#computer simulation|computer simulations]]. The fields of [[mathematical physics|mathematical]] and [[computational physics]] are active areas of research. Theoretical physics has historically rested on [[philosophy]] and [[metaphysics]]; electromagnetism was unified this way.<ref>
See, for example, the influence of [[Immanuel Kant|Kant]] and [[Johann Wilhelm Ritter|Ritter]] on [[Hans Christian Ørsted|Oersted]].
</ref> Beyond the known universe, the field of [[theoretical physics]] also deals with hypothetical issues,<ref>Concepts which are denoted ''hypothetical'' can change with time. For example, the [[atom]] of nineteenth century physics was denigrated by some, including [[Ernst Mach]]'s critique of [[Ludwig Boltzmann]]'s formulation of [[statistical mechanics]]. By the end of [[World War II]], the atom was no longer deemed hypothetical.</ref> such as [[Many-worlds interpretation|parallel universes]], a [[Multiverse (science)|multiverse]], and [[higher dimension]]s. Physicists speculate on these possibilities, and from them, hypothesize theories.


[[Science in the medieval Islamic world|Islamic scholarship]] inherited [[Aristotelian physics]] from the Greeks and during the [[Islamic Golden Age]] developed it further, especially placing emphasis on observation and ''[[A priori and a posteriori|a priori]]'' reasoning, developing early forms of the [[scientific method]].
[[Experiment]]al physics informs, and is informed by, [[engineering]] and [[technology]]. Experimental physicists involved in [[basic research]] design and perform experiments with equipment such as [[particle accelerator]]s and [[laser]]s, whereas those involved in [[applied research]] often work in industry, developing technologies such as [[MRI|magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)]] and [[transistor]]s. Feynman has noted that experimentalists may seek areas which are not well explored by theorists.{{Fact|date=December 2008}}


[[File:Hazan.png|thumb|right|upright|[[Ibn al-Haytham]] ({{Circa|965|1040}}) wrote of his ''camera obscura'' experiments in the ''Book of Optics''.{{sfn|Smith|2001|loc=Book I [6.85], [6.86], p. 379; Book II, [3.80], p. 453}}|alt=Ibn Al-Haytham (Alhazen) drawing]]
===Relation to mathematics and the other sciences===
In the ''Assayer'' (1622), Galileo noted that mathematics is the language in which Nature expresses its laws.<ref>
"Philosophy is written in that great book which ever lies before our eyes. I mean the universe, but we cannot understand it if we do not first learn the language and grasp the symbols in which it is written. This book is written in the mathematical language, and the symbols are triangles, circles and other geometrical figures, without whose help it is humanly impossible to comprehend a single word of it, and without which one wanders in vain through a dark labyrinth." – [[Galileo]] (1623), ''[[The Assayer]]'', as quoted by G. Toraldo Di Francia (1976), ''The Investigation of the Physical World'' ISBN 0-521-29925-X p.10 </ref>
Most of the experimental results in physics are numerical measurements and theories in physics use mathematics to give numerical results to match these measurements. Physics relies on [[mathematics]] to provide the logical framework in which physical laws can be precisely formulated and predictions quantified. Whenever [[analytic solution]]s of equations are not feasible, [[numerical analysis]] and [[simulation#computer simulation|simulations]] can be utilized. Thus, [[scientific computing|scientific computation]] is an integral part of physics, and the field of [[computational physics]] is an active area of research.


The most notable innovations under Islamic scholarship were in the field of [[optics]] and vision,<ref>{{cite book |last= Dallal|first=Ahmad |author-link= |date= 2010|title=Islam, Science, and the Challenge of History |url= |location=New Haven |publisher= Yale University Press|page=38 |isbn=|quote = Within two centuries, the field of optics was radically transformed}}</ref> which came from the works of many scientists like [[Ibn Sahl (mathematician)|Ibn Sahl]], [[Al-Kindi]], [[Ibn al-Haytham]], [[Kamāl al-Dīn al-Fārisī|Al-Farisi]] and [[Avicenna]]. The most notable work was ''[[Book of Optics|The Book of Optics]]'' (also known as Kitāb al-Manāẓir), written by Ibn al-Haytham, in which he presented the alternative to the ancient Greek idea about vision.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Tbakhi |first1=Abdelghani |last2=Amr |first2=Samir S. |date=2007 |title=Ibn Al-Haytham: Father of Modern Optics |journal=Annals of Saudi Medicine |volume=27 |issue=6 |pages=464–467 |doi=10.5144/0256-4947.2007.464 |issn=0256-4947 |pmc=6074172 |pmid=18059131}}</ref> In his ''Treatise on Light'' as well as in his ''Kitāb al-Manāẓir'', he presented a study of the phenomenon of the [[camera obscura]] (his thousand-year-old version of the [[pinhole camera]]) and delved further into the way the eye itself works. Using the knowledge of previous scholars, he began to explain how light enters the eye. He asserted that the light ray is focused, but the actual explanation of how light projected to the back of the eye had to wait until 1604. His ''Treatise on Light'' explained the ''camera obscura'', hundreds of years before the modern development of photography.<ref>{{harvnb |Howard|Rogers|1995|pp=6–7}}</ref>
A key difference between physics and mathematics is that since physics is ultimately concerned with descriptions of the material world, it tests its theories by comparing the predictions of its theories with data procured from observations and experimentation, whereas mathematics is concerned with abstract patterns, not limited by those observed in the real world. The distinction, however, is not always clear-cut. There is a large area of research intermediate between physics and mathematics, known as [[mathematical physics]].


[[File:Pinhole-camera.svg|thumb|left|upright|The basic way a pinhole camera works]]
Physics is also intimately related to many other sciences, as well as applied fields like engineering and medicine. The principles of physics find applications throughout the other [[natural science]]s as some phenomena studied in physics, such as the [[conservation of energy]], are common to ''all'' material systems. Other phenomena, such as superconductivity, stem from these laws, but are not laws themselves because they only appear in some systems. Physics is often said to be the "fundamental science" (chemistry is sometimes included), because each of the other disciplines ([[biology]], [[chemistry]], [[geology]], [[material science]], [[engineering]], [[medicine]] etc.) deals with particular types of material systems that obey the laws of physics.<ref name = "Feynman lectures"/> For example, chemistry is the science of collections of matter (such as gases and liquids formed of [[atom]]s and [[molecule]]s) and the processes known as [[chemical reaction]]s that result in the change of [[chemical substance]]s. The structure, reactivity, and properties of a [[chemical compound]] are determined by the properties of the underlying molecules, which can be described by areas of physics such as [[quantum mechanics]] (called in this case [[quantum chemistry]]), [[thermodynamics]], and [[electromagnetism]].


The seven-volume ''Book of Optics'' (''Kitab al-Manathir'') influenced thinking<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Al-Khalili |first=Jim |date=February 2015 |title=In retrospect: Book of Optics |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/518164a |journal=Nature |language=en |volume=518 |issue=7538 |pages=164–165 |doi=10.1038/518164a |bibcode=2015Natur.518..164A |issn=1476-4687}}</ref> across disciplines from the theory of visual [[perception]] to the nature of [[perspectivity|perspective]] in medieval art, in both the East and the West, for more than 600 years. This included later European scholars and fellow polymaths, from [[Robert Grosseteste]] and [[Leonardo da Vinci]] to [[Johannes Kepler]].
===Philosophical implications===
{{more|Philosophy of Physics}}


The translation of ''The Book of Optics'' had an impact on Europe. From it, later European scholars were able to build devices that replicated those Ibn al-Haytham had built and understand the way vision works.[[File:Justus Sustermans - Portrait of Galileo Galilei, 1636.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Galileo Galilei]] (1564–1642) related mathematics, theoretical physics, and experimental physics.]]
Physics in many ways stemmed from [[ancient Greek philosophy]]. From [[Thales]]' first attempt to characterize matter, to [[Democritus]]' deduction that matter ought to reduce to an invariant state, the [[Ptolemaic astronomy]] of a crystalline [[firmament]], and Aristotle's book ''[[Physics (Aristotle)|Physics]]'', different Greek philosophers advanced their own theories of nature. Well into the 18th century, physics was known as "[[Natural philosophy]]".


=== Classical ===
By the 19th century physics was realized as a [[positive science]] and a distinct discipline separate from philosophy and the other sciences. Physics, as with the rest of science, relies on [[philosophy of science]] to give an adequate description of the scientific method.<ref>{{cite book|last=Rosenberg|first=Alex|title=Philosophy of Science|publisher=Routledge|date=2006|isbn=0-415-34317-8}} See Chapter 1 for a discussion on the necessity of philosophy of science.</ref> The scientific method employs [[A priori and a posteriori (philosophy)|a priori reasoning]] as well as [[A priori and a posteriori (philosophy)|a posteriori]] reasoning and the use of [[Bayesian inference]] to measure the validity of a given theory.<ref>Peter Godfrey-Smith (2003), Chapter 14 "Bayesianism and Modern Theories of Evidence" ''Theory and Reality: an introduction to the philosophy of science'' ISBN 0-226-30063-3</ref>
{{main|Classical physics}}


[[File:GodfreyKneller-IsaacNewton-1689.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Isaac Newton]] discovered the [[Newton's laws of motion|laws of motion]] and [[Newton's law of universal gravitation|universal gravitation]]]]
{{cquote|Truth is ever to be found in the simplicity, and not in the multiplicity and confusion of things.|30px|30px|[[Isaac Newton]]}}
Physics became a separate science when [[early modern Europe]]ans used experimental and quantitative methods to discover what are now considered to be the [[laws of physics]].<ref name="benchaim2004">{{harvnb |Ben-Chaim|2004}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=November 2016}}


Major developments in this period include the replacement of the [[geocentric model]] of the [[Solar System]] with the heliocentric [[Copernican model]], the [[Kepler's laws|laws governing the motion of planetary bodies]] (determined by Kepler between 1609 and 1619), Galileo's pioneering work on [[telescope]]s and [[observational astronomy]] in the 16th and 17th centuries, and [[Isaac Newton]]'s discovery and unification of the [[Newton's laws of motion|laws of motion]] and [[Newton's law of universal gravitation|universal gravitation]] (that would come to bear his name).<ref>{{harvnb |Guicciardini|1999}}</ref> Newton also developed [[calculus]],{{efn|Calculus was independently developed at around the same time by [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]]; while Leibniz was the first to publish his work and develop much of the notation used for calculus today, Newton was the first to develop calculus and apply it to physical problems. See also [[Leibniz–Newton calculus controversy]]}} the mathematical study of continuous change, which provided new mathematical methods for solving physical problems.<ref name="allen1997">{{harvnb |Allen|1997}}</ref>
The development of physics has answered many questions of early philosophers, but has also raised new questions. Study of the philosophical issues surrounding physics, the [[philosophy of physics]], involves issues such as the nature of [[space]] and [[time]], [[determinism]], and metaphysical outlooks such as [[empiricism]], [[naturalism]] and [[realism]].<ref>Peter Godfrey-Smith (2003), Chapter 15 "Empiricism, Naturalism, and Scientific Realism?" ''Theory and Reality: an introduction to the philosophy of science'' ISBN 0-226-30063-3</ref>


The discovery of laws in [[thermodynamics]], [[chemistry]], and [[electromagnetics]] resulted from research efforts during the [[Industrial Revolution]] as energy needs increased.<ref name="schoolscience-industrialrevolution">{{cite web
Many physicists have written about the philosophical implications of their work, for instance [[Laplace]], who championed [[causal determinism]],<ref>See Laplace, Pierre Simon, ''A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities'', translated from the 6th French edition by Frederick Wilson Truscott and Frederick Lincoln Emory, Dover Publications (New York, 1951)</ref> and [[Erwin Schrödinger]], who wrote on Quantum Mechanics.<ref>See "The Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics" Ox Bow Press (1995) ISBN 1881987094. and "My View of the World" Ox Bow Press (1983) ISBN 0918024307.</ref> The mathematical physicist [[Roger Penrose]] has been called a [[Platonist]] by [[Stephen Hawking]],<ref> Stephen Hawking and Roger Penrose (1996), ''The Nature of Space and Time'' ISBN 0-691-05084-8 p.4 "I think that Roger is a Platonist at heart but he must answer for himself." </ref> a view Penrose discusses in his book, ''The Road to Reality''.<ref>Roger Penrose, ''The Road to Reality'' ISBN 0-679-45443-8</ref> Hawking refers to himself as an "unashamed reductionist" and takes issue with Penrose's views.<ref>{{cite book|last=Penrose|first=Roger|coauthors=Abner Shimony, Nancy Cartwright, Stephen Hawking|title=The Large, the Small and the Human Mind|publisher=Cambridge University Press|date=1997|isbn=0-521-78572-3}}</ref>
|title = The Industrial Revolution
|publisher = Schoolscience.org, [[Institute of Physics]]
|url = http://resources.schoolscience.co.uk/IoP/14-16/biogs/biogs5.html
|access-date = 1 April 2014
|url-status=live
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|archive-date = 7 April 2014
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}}</ref> The laws comprising classical physics remain widely used for objects on everyday scales travelling at non-relativistic speeds, since they provide a close approximation in such situations, and theories such as [[quantum mechanics]] and the [[theory of relativity]] simplify to their classical equivalents at such scales. Inaccuracies in [[classical mechanics]] for very small objects and very high velocities led to the development of modern physics in the 20th century.


==History==
=== Modern ===
{{main|History of physics}}
{{main|Modern physics}}
{{see also|History of special relativity|History of quantum mechanics}}
{{seealso|Famous physicists|Nobel Prize in physics}}
[[File:Max Planck Nobel 1918.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Max Planck]] (1858–1947), the originator of the theory of [[quantum mechanics]]]]
[[Image:Francesco Hayez 001.jpg|thumb|150px|left|[[Aristotle]]]]
[[File:Einstein1921 by F Schmutzer 2.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Albert Einstein]] (1879–1955), discovered the [[photoelectric effect]] and [[theory of relativity]].]]
[[Modern physics]] began in the early 20th century with the work of [[Max Planck]] in quantum theory and [[Albert Einstein]]'s theory of relativity. Both of these theories came about due to inaccuracies in classical mechanics in certain situations. [[Classical mechanics]] predicted that the [[speed of light]] depends on the motion of the observer, which could not be resolved with the constant speed predicted by [[Maxwell's equations]] of electromagnetism. This discrepancy was corrected by Einstein's theory of [[special relativity]], which replaced classical mechanics for fast-moving bodies and allowed for a constant speed of light.<ref name="oconnorrobertson1996-relativity">{{harvnb |O'Connor|Robertson|1996a}}</ref> [[Black-body radiation]] provided another problem for classical physics, which was corrected when Planck proposed that the excitation of material oscillators is possible only in discrete steps proportional to their frequency. This, along with the [[photoelectric effect]] and a complete theory predicting discrete [[energy levels]] of [[Atomic orbital|electron orbitals]], led to the theory of quantum mechanics improving on classical physics at very small scales.<ref name="oconnorrobertson1996-quantum">{{harvnb |O'Connor|Robertson|1996b}}</ref>


Quantum mechanics would come to be pioneered by [[Werner Heisenberg]], [[Erwin Schrödinger]] and [[Paul Dirac]].<ref name="oconnorrobertson1996-quantum"/> From this early work, and work in related fields, the [[Standard Model of particle physics]] was derived.<ref name="donut2001">{{cite web |website=[[DONUT]] |title=The Standard Model |publisher=[[Fermilab]] |date=29 June 2001 |url=http://www-donut.fnal.gov/web_pages/standardmodelpg/TheStandardModel.html |access-date=1 April 2014 |archive-date=31 May 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140531012204/http://www-donut.fnal.gov/web_pages/standardmodelpg/TheStandardModel.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Following the discovery of a particle with properties consistent with the [[Higgs boson]] at [[CERN]] in 2012,<ref name="cho2012">{{harvnb |Cho|2012}}</ref> all [[fundamental particles]] predicted by the standard model, and no others, appear to exist; however, [[physics beyond the Standard Model]], with theories such as [[supersymmetry]], is an active area of research.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Womersley |first=J. |url=http://www.symmetrymagazine.org/sites/default/files/legacy/pdfs/200502/beyond_the_standard_model.pdf |date=February 2005 |title=Beyond the Standard Model |magazine= Symmetry |volume=2 |issue=1 |pages=22–25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924114111/http://www.symmetrymagazine.org/sites/default/files/legacy/pdfs/200502/beyond_the_standard_model.pdf |archive-date=24 September 2015 |url-status=live}}</ref> Areas of mathematics in general are important to this field, such as the study of [[probability amplitude|probabilities]] and [[Group theory#Physics|groups]].
===Ancient times===
Since antiquity, people have tried to understand the behavior of the natural world. One great mystery was the predictable behavior of celestial objects such as the [[Sun]] and the [[Moon]]. Several theories were proposed, the majority of which were disproved. Early physical theories were largely couched in philosophical terms, and never verified by systematic experimental testing as is popular today. Many of the commonly accepted works of [[Ptolemy]] and [[Physics (Aristotle)|Aristotle]] are not always found to match everyday observations. Even so, [[Indian philosophy|Indian philosophers]] and [[Indian science and technology#Astronomy|astronomers]] gave many correct descriptions in [[atomism]] and [[astronomy]], and the [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] thinker [[Archimedes]] derived many correct quantitative descriptions of [[mechanics]] and [[hydrostatics]].


===Middle Ages===
==Core theories==
{{further|Branches of physics|Outline of physics}}
[[Image:Ibn al-Haytham.png|thumb|right|[[Ibn al-Haytham]] (Alhazen)]]
Physics deals with a wide variety of systems, although certain theories are used by all physicists. Each of these theories was experimentally tested numerous times and found to be an adequate approximation of nature. For instance, the theory of [[classical mechanics]] accurately describes the motion of objects, provided they are much larger than [[atom]]s and moving at a speed much less than the speed of light. These theories continue to be areas of active research today. [[Chaos theory]], an aspect of classical mechanics, was discovered in the 20th century, three centuries after the original formulation of classical mechanics by Newton (1642–1727).


These central theories are important tools for research into more specialized topics, and any physicist, regardless of their specialization, is expected to be literate in them. These include classical mechanics, quantum mechanics, thermodynamics and [[statistical mechanics]], [[electromagnetism]], and special relativity.
The willingness to question previously held truths and search for new answers eventually resulted in a period of major scientific advancements, now known as the [[Scientific Revolution]] of the late 17th century. The precursors to the scientific revolution can be traced back to the important developments made in India and Persia, including the [[ellipse|elliptical]] model of planetary orbits based on the [[heliocentrism|heliocentric]] [[solar system]] developed by [[Indian mathematics|Indian mathematician]]-astronomer [[Aryabhata]]; the basic ideas of [[atomic theory]] developed by [[Hindu]] and [[Jaina]] philosophers;{{Fact|date=December 2008}} the theory of light being equivalent to energy particles developed by the Indian [[Buddhist]] scholars [[Dignāga]] and [[Dharmakirti]];{{Fact|date=December 2008}} the optical theory of [[light]] developed by [[Arab people|Arab]] [[Islamic science|scientist]] [[Alhazen]]; the [[Astrolabe]] invented by the Persian [[Mohammad al-Fazari]]; and the significant flaws in the [[Ptolemaic system]] pointed out by Persian scientist [[Nasir al-Din al-Tusi]]. As the influence of the [[Islam]]ic [[Caliph]]ate expanded to Europe, the works of Aristotle preserved by the [[Arab]]s, and the works of the Indians and Persians, became known in Europe by the 12th and 13th centuries.


===Classical theory===
The [[Middle Ages]] saw the emergence of [[experimental physics]] with the development of an early [[scientific method]] emphasizing the role of [[experiment]]ation and [[mathematics]]. [[Ibn al-Haytham]] (Alhazen, 965–1039) is considered a central figure in this shift in physics from a philosophical activity to an experimental one. In his ''[[Book of Optics]]'' (1021), he developed an early [[scientific method]] in order to prove the intromission theory of [[Visual perception|vision]] and discredit the [[Emission theory (vision)|emission theory of vision]] previously supported by [[Euclid]] and [[Ptolemy]].<ref name=Thiele>{{citation|first=Rüdiger|last=Thiele|year=2005|title=In Memoriam: Matthias Schramm, 1928–2005|journal=Historia Mathematica|volume=32|issue=3|date=August 2005|pages=271–274|doi=10.1016/j.hm.2005.05.002}}: {{quote|“Through a closer examination of Ibn al-Haytham's conceptions of [[mathematical model]]s and of the role they play in his theory of [[sense]] [[perception]], it becomes evident that he was the true founder of physics in the modern sense of the word; in fact he anticipated by six centuries the fertile ideas that were to mark the beginning of this new branch of science.”}}</ref><ref>{{citation|first=Rüdiger|last=Thiele|year=2005|title=In Memoriam: Matthias Schramm|journal=Arabic Sciences and Philosophy|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|volume=15|pages=329–331|doi=10.1017/S0957423905000214}}</ref><ref name=Gorini>{{cite journal |last=Gorini |first=Rosanna |title=Al-Haytham the man of experience. First steps in the science of vision |journal=Journal of the International Society for the History of Islamic Medicine |volume=2 |issue=4 |pages=53–55 |date=October 2003 |url=http://www.ishim.net/ishimj/4/10.pdf |format=PDF |accessdate=2008-09-25 |quote=According to the majority of the [[historian]]s al-Haytham was the pioneer of the modern scientific method. With his book he changed the meaning of the term optics and established experiments as the norm of proof in the field. His investigations are based not on abstract theories, but on experimental evidences and his experiments were systematic and repeatable.}}</ref> His most famous experiments involve his development and use of the [[camera obscura]] in order to test several hypotheses on [[light]], such as light travelling in straight lines and whether different lights can mix in the air.<ref>[[A. I. Sabra]] (1989), ''Ibn al-Haytham, The Optics of Ibn al-Haytham'', London: The Warburg Institute, vol. I, pp. 90-91</ref> This experimental tradition in optics established by Ibn al-Haytham continued among his successors in both the Islamic world, with the likes of [[Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi]], [[Kamāl al-Dīn al-Fārisī]] and [[Taqi al-Din]], and in Europe, with the likes of [[Robert Grosseteste]], [[Roger Bacon]], [[Witelo]], [[John Pecham]], [[Theodoric of Freiberg]], [[Johannes Kepler]], [[Willebrord Snellius]], [[René Descartes]] and [[Christiaan Huygens]].
{{Main|Classical physics}}


Classical physics includes the traditional branches and topics that were recognized and well-developed before the beginning of the 20th century—classical mechanics, [[acoustics]], [[optics]], thermodynamics, and electromagnetism. Classical mechanics is concerned with bodies acted on by [[force]]s and bodies in [[motion (physics)|motion]] and may be divided into [[statics]] (study of the forces on a body or bodies not subject to an acceleration), [[kinematics]] (study of motion without regard to its causes), and [[Analytical dynamics|dynamics]] (study of motion and the forces that affect it); mechanics may also be divided into [[solid mechanics]] and [[fluid mechanics]] (known together as [[continuum mechanics]]), the latter include such branches as [[hydrostatics]], [[Fluid dynamics|hydrodynamics]] and [[pneumatics]]. Acoustics is the study of how sound is produced, controlled, transmitted and received.<ref name="britannica-acoustics">{{cite encyclopedia |title=acoustics |url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/4044/acoustics |encyclopedia=[[Encyclopædia Britannica]] |access-date=14 June 2013 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130618235952/http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/4044/acoustics |archive-date=18 June 2013 }}</ref> Important modern branches of acoustics include [[ultrasonics]], the study of sound waves of very high frequency beyond the range of human hearing; [[bioacoustics]], the physics of animal calls and hearing,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bioacoustics.info/ |title=Bioacoustics – the International Journal of Animal Sound and its Recording |publisher=Taylor & Francis |access-date=31 July 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120905120546/http://www.bioacoustics.info/ |archive-date=5 September 2012 }}</ref> and [[electroacoustics]], the manipulation of audible sound waves using electronics.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=[[Acoustical Society of America]] |title=Acoustics and You (A Career in Acoustics?) |url=http://asaweb.devcloud.acquia-sites.com/education_outreach/careers_in_acoustics |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150904010934/http://asaweb.devcloud.acquia-sites.com/education_outreach/careers_in_acoustics |url-status=dead |archive-date=4 September 2015 |access-date=21 May 2013 }}</ref>
===The Scientific Revolution===
[[Image:Galileo.arp.300pix.jpg|thumb|right|[[Galileo]]]]
The Scientific Revolution is held by most historians (e.g., Howard Margolis) to have begun in 1543, when the first printed copy of [[Nicolaus Copernicus]]'s ''[[De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium|De Revolutionibus]]'' (most of which had been written years prior but whose publication had been delayed) was brought from [[Nuremberg]] to the <!-- do not enter nationality claims here --> astronomer, who died soon after receiving the copy.


Optics, the study of light, is concerned not only with [[visible light]] but also with [[infrared]] and [[ultraviolet radiation]], which exhibit all of the phenomena of visible light except visibility, e.g., reflection, refraction, interference, diffraction, dispersion, and polarization of light. Heat is a form of energy, the internal energy possessed by the particles of which a substance is composed; thermodynamics deals with the relationships between heat and other forms of energy. Electricity and [[magnetism]] have been studied as a single branch of physics since the intimate connection between them was discovered in the early 19th century; an [[electric current]] gives rise to a [[magnetic field]], and a changing magnetic field induces an electric current. [[Electrostatics]] deals with [[electric charge]]s at rest, [[Classical electromagnetism|electrodynamics]] with moving charges, and [[magnetostatics]] with magnetic poles at rest.
[[Image:GodfreyKneller-IsaacNewton-1689.jpg|thumb|left|[[Sir Isaac Newton]]]]
Further significant advances were made over the following century by [[Galileo Galilei]], [[Christiaan Huygens]], [[Johannes Kepler]], and [[Blaise Pascal]]. During the early 17th century, Galileo championed the use of observation and experimentation to validate physical theories. Galileo formulated and successfully tested several results in [[dynamics (mechanics)|dynamics]], in particular the Law of [[Inertia]]. In 1687, [[Isaac Newton|Newton]] published the ''[[Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica|Principia]]'', detailing two comprehensive and successful physical theories: [[Newton's laws of motion]], from which arise [[classical mechanics]]; and [[Newton's Law of Gravitation]], which describes the [[fundamental force]] of [[gravity]]. Both theories agreed well with experiment. The ''Principia'' also included several theories in [[fluid dynamics]]. Classical mechanics was re-formulated and extended by [[Leonhard Euler]], French mathematician [[Joseph Louis Lagrange|Joseph-Louis Comte de Lagrange]], Irish mathematical physicist [[William Rowan Hamilton]], and others, who produced new results in mathematical physics. The law of universal gravitation initiated the field of [[astrophysics]], which describes [[astronomy|astronomical]] phenomena using physical theories.


===Modern theory ===
After Newton defined [[classical mechanics]], the next great field of inquiry within physics was the nature of [[electricity]]. Observations in the 17th and 18th century by scientists such as [[Robert Boyle]], [[Stephen Gray (scientist)|Stephen Gray]], and [[Benjamin Franklin]] created a foundation for later work. These observations also established our basic understanding of electrical charge and [[electric current]].
{{Main|Modern physics}}
[[Image:James Clerk Maxwell.jpg|thumb|right|150px|[[James Clerk Maxwell]]]]
{{Modern Physics}}


Classical physics is generally concerned with matter and energy on the normal scale of observation, while much of modern physics is concerned with the behavior of matter and energy under extreme conditions or on a very large or very small scale. For example, [[Atomic physics|atomic]] and [[nuclear physics]] study matter on the smallest scale at which [[chemical element]]s can be identified. The [[Particle physics|physics of elementary particles]] is on an even smaller scale since it is concerned with the most basic units of matter; this branch of physics is also known as high-energy physics because of the extremely high energies necessary to produce many types of particles in [[particle accelerator]]s. On this scale, ordinary, commonsensical notions of space, time, matter, and energy are no longer valid.<ref>{{harvnb |Tipler|Llewellyn|2003|pp=269, 477, 561}}</ref>
In 1821, the English physicist and chemist [[Michael Faraday]] integrated the study of [[magnetism]] with the study of electricity. This was done by demonstrating that a moving [[magnet]] induced an [[electric current]] in a [[conductor (material)|conductor]]. Faraday also formulated a physical conception of [[electromagnetic field]]s. [[James Clerk Maxwell]] built upon this conception, in 1864, with an interlinked set of 20 equations that explained the interactions between [[electric field|electric]] and [[magnetic field]]s. These 20 equations were later reduced, using [[vector calculus]], to a set of four equations, namely [[Maxwell's equations]], by [[Oliver Heaviside]].


The two chief theories of modern physics present a different picture of the concepts of space, time, and matter from that presented by classical physics. Classical mechanics approximates nature as continuous, while quantum theory is concerned with the discrete nature of many phenomena at the atomic and subatomic level and with the complementary aspects of particles and waves in the description of such phenomena. The theory of relativity is concerned with the description of phenomena that take place in a [[frame of reference]] that is in motion with respect to an observer; the special theory of relativity is concerned with motion in the absence of gravitational fields and the [[General relativity|general theory of relativity]] with motion and its connection with [[gravitation]]. Both quantum theory and the theory of relativity find applications in many areas of modern physics.<ref>{{harvnb |Tipler|Llewellyn|2003|pp=1–4, 115, 185–187}}</ref>
In addition to other electromagnetic phenomena, Maxwell's equations also can be used to describe [[light]]. Confirmation of this observation was made with the 1888 discovery of [[radio]] by [[Heinrich Hertz]] and in 1895 when [[Wilhelm Roentgen]] detected [[X rays]]. The ability to describe light in electromagnetic terms helped serve as a springboard for [[Albert Einstein]]'s publication of the theory of [[special relativity]] in 1905. This theory combined classical mechanics with Maxwell's equations.


==== Fundamental concepts in modern physics ====
From the late 17th century onwards, [[thermodynamics]] was developed by physicist and chemist [[Robert Boyle]], [[Thomas Young (scientist)|Thomas Young]], and many others. In 1733, [[Daniel Bernoulli]] used statistical arguments with classical mechanics to derive thermodynamic results, initiating the field of [[statistical mechanics]]. In 1798, [[Benjamin Thompson]] demonstrated the conversion of mechanical work into heat, and in 1847 [[James Joule]] stated the law of conservation of [[energy]], in the form of heat as well as mechanical energy. [[Ludwig Boltzmann]], in the 19th century, is responsible for the modern form of statistical mechanics.
* [[Action (physics)|Action]]
* [[Causality (physics)|Causality]]
* [[Principle of covariance|Covariance]]
* [[Particle]]
* [[Physical field]]
* [[Physical interaction]]
* [[Quantum]]
* [[Statistical ensemble]]
* [[symmetry (physics)|Symmetry]]
* [[Wave]]


===Distinction between classical and modern physics===
===1895 to present===
In 1895, [[Wilhelm Röntgen]] discovered [[X-ray]]s, which turned out to be high-frequency electromagnetic radiation. [[Radioactivity]] was discovered in 1896 by [[Henri Becquerel]], and further studied by [[Maria Sklodowska-Curie|Marie Curie]], [[Pierre Curie]], and others. This initiated the field of [[nuclear physics]].


[[File:Modernphysicsfields.svg|thumb|upright=1.5|left|The basic domains of physics]]
In 1897, [[J.J. Thomson|Joseph J. Thomson]] discovered the [[electron]], the elementary particle which carries electrical current in [[electrical circuit|circuits]]. In 1904, he proposed the first model of the [[atom]], known as the [[atom/plum pudding|plum pudding model]]. (The existence of the atom had been proposed in 1808 by [[John Dalton]].)


While physics itself aims to discover universal laws, its theories lie in explicit domains of applicability.
These discoveries revealed that the assumption of many physicists that atoms were the basic unit of [[matter]] was flawed, and prompted further study into the structure of [[atom]]s. In 1911, [[Ernest Rutherford]] deduced from [[rutherford scattering|scattering experiments]] the existence of a compact atomic nucleus, with positively charged constituents dubbed [[proton]]s. [[Neutron]]s, the neutral nuclear constituents, were discovered in 1932 by [[James Chadwick|Chadwick]]. The equivalence of mass and energy (Einstein, 1905) was spectacularly demonstrated during [[World War II]], as research was conducted by each side into [[nuclear physics]], for the purpose of creating a [[nuclear weapon|nuclear bomb]]. The German effort, led by Heisenberg, did not succeed, but the Allied [[Manhattan Project]] reached its goal. In America, a team led by [[Enrico Fermi|Fermi]] achieved the first man-made [[nuclear chain reaction]] in 1942, and in 1945 the world's first [[nuclear weapon|nuclear explosive]] was detonated at [[Trinity site]], near [[Alamogordo]], [[New Mexico]].
[[File:Solvay conference 1927.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.2|[[Solvay Conference]] of 1927, with prominent physicists such as [[Albert Einstein]], [[Werner Heisenberg]], [[Max Planck]], [[Hendrik Lorentz]], [[Niels Bohr]], [[Marie Curie]], [[Erwin Schrödinger]] and [[Paul Dirac]]]]


Loosely speaking, the laws of classical physics accurately describe systems whose important length scales are greater than the atomic scale and whose motions are much slower than the speed of light. Outside of this domain, observations do not match predictions provided by classical mechanics. Einstein contributed the framework of special relativity, which replaced notions of [[absolute time and space]] with [[spacetime]] and allowed an accurate description of systems whose components have speeds approaching the speed of light. Planck, Schrödinger, and others introduced quantum mechanics, a probabilistic notion of particles and interactions that allowed an accurate description of atomic and subatomic scales. Later, [[quantum field theory]] unified quantum mechanics and special relativity. General relativity allowed for a dynamical, curved spacetime, with which highly massive systems and the large-scale structure of the universe can be well-described. General relativity has not yet been unified with the other fundamental descriptions; several candidate theories of [[quantum gravity]] are being developed.
In 1900, [[Max Planck]] published his explanation of [[blackbody radiation]].<ref>See, for example pp.116–117, [[Max Planck]] ''A Survey of Physical Theory'' ISBN 0-486-67867-9
</ref> This equation assumed that radiators are [[quantum|quantized]] in nature, which proved to be the opening argument in the edifice that would become [[quantum mechanics]].


==Philosophy and relation to other fields==
[[Image:Albert Einstein Head.jpg|thumb|right|175px|[[Albert Einstein]] in 1947]]
{{Main|Philosophy of physics}}
Physics, as with the rest of science, relies on the [[philosophy of science]] and its "[[scientific method]]" to advance knowledge of the physical world.<ref name="rosenberg2006ch1">{{harvnb |Rosenberg|2006|loc=Chapter 1}}</ref> The scientific method employs ''[[a priori and a posteriori]]'' reasoning as well as the use of [[Bayesian inference]] to measure the validity of a given theory.<ref name="godfreysmith2003ch14">{{harvnb |Godfrey-Smith|2003|loc=Chapter 14: "Bayesianism and Modern Theories of Evidence"}}</ref>
Study of the philosophical issues surrounding physics, the [[philosophy of physics]], involves issues such as the nature of [[Spacetime|space and time]], [[determinism]], and [[Metaphysics|metaphysical]] outlooks such as [[empiricism]], [[naturalism (philosophy)|naturalism]], and [[Philosophical realism|realism]].<ref name="godfreysmith2003ch15">{{harvnb |Godfrey-Smith|2003|loc=Chapter 15: "Empiricism, Naturalism, and Scientific Realism?"}}</ref>


Many physicists have written about the philosophical implications of their work, for instance [[Pierre-Simon Laplace|Laplace]], who championed [[causal determinism]],<ref name="laplace1951">{{harvnb |Laplace|1951}}</ref> and [[Erwin Schrödinger]], who wrote on quantum mechanics.<ref name="schroedinger1983">{{harvnb |Schrödinger|1983}}</ref><ref name="schroedinger1995">{{harvnb |Schrödinger|1995}}</ref> The mathematical physicist [[Roger Penrose]] has been called a [[Platonism|Platonist]] by [[Stephen Hawking]],<ref name="hawkingpenrose1996p4">{{harvnb|Hawking|Penrose|1996|p=4}}. "I think that Roger is a Platonist at heart but he must answer for himself."</ref> a view Penrose discusses in his book, ''[[The Road to Reality]]''.<ref name="penrose2004">{{harvnb |Penrose|2004}}</ref> Hawking referred to himself as an "unashamed reductionist" and took issue with Penrose's views.<ref name="penroseshimonycartwrighthawking1997">{{harvnb |Penrose|Shimony|Cartwright|Hawking|1997}}</ref>
1905 was Albert Einstein's "[[Annus Mirabilis papers|Annus Mirabilis]]", during which he wrote five groundbreaking papers, including a paper on [[Special Relativity]]. Relativity prescribes a different transformation between [[inertial frame of reference|reference frames]] than classical mechanics which necessitated the development of relativistic mechanics. Einstein built further on the special theory by including gravity into his calculations, and published his theory of [[general relativity]] in 1915. [[General relativity]] unifies space and time into a single entity, [[spacetime]].


[[File:Pahoeoe fountain original.jpg|thumb|This [[parabola]]-shaped [[lava flow]] illustrates an application of mathematics in physics — in this case, Galileo's [[law of falling bodies]].]]
One part of the theory of general relativity are [[Einstein's field equation]]s. These describes how the ''stress-energy tensor'' creates curvature of [[spacetime]] and forms the basis of general relativity. Further work on Einstein's field equation produced results which predicted the [[Big Bang]], [[black hole]]s, and the [[expanding universe]]. Einstein believed in a static universe and tried (and failed) to fix his equation to allow for this. However, by 1929 [[Edwin Hubble]]'s astronomical observations suggested that the universe is expanding. Thus, the universe must have been smaller and therefore hotter in the past. In 1933 [[Karl Jansky]] at Bell Labs discovered the radio emission from the [[Milky Way]], and thereby initiated the science of [[radio astronomy]]. By the 1940s, researchers like [[George Gamow]] proposed the ''[[Big Bang]]'' theory,<ref>Alpher, Herman, and Gamow. ''Nature'' '''162''', 774 (1948).</ref> evidence for which was discovered in 1964;<ref>{{cite web|last=Wilson |first=Robert W. |authorlink=Robert Woodrow Wilson|date=1978 |url=http://nobelprize.org/physics/laureates/1978/wilson-lecture.pdf |title=The cosmic microwave background radiation |format=PDF |accessdate=2006-06-07 }} Wilson's Nobel Lecture.</ref> [[Enrico Fermi]] and [[Fred Hoyle]] were among the doubters in the 1940s and 1950s. Hoyle had dubbed Gamow's theory the ''Big Bang'' in order to debunk it. Today, it is one of the principal tenets of [[physical cosmology]].
[[File:Physics and other sciences.png|thumb|upright=0.5|left|Mathematics and ontology are used in physics. Physics is used in chemistry and [[cosmology]].]]


Mathematics provides a compact and exact language used to describe the order in nature. This was noted and advocated by [[Pythagoras]],<ref name="dijksterhuis1986">{{harvnb|Dijksterhuis|1986}}</ref> [[Plato]],<ref name="mastin2010-plato">{{harvnb|Mastin|2010}} "Although usually remembered today as a philosopher, Plato was also one of ancient Greece's most important patrons of mathematics. Inspired by Pythagoras, he founded his Academy in Athens in 387 BC, where he stressed mathematics as a way of understanding more about reality. In particular, he was convinced that geometry was the key to unlocking the secrets of the universe. The sign above the Academy entrance read: 'Let no-one ignorant of geometry enter here.'"</ref> Galileo,<ref name="toraldodifrancia1976p10-galileo">{{harvnb|Toraldo Di Francia|1976|p=10}} 'Philosophy is written in that great book which ever lies before our eyes. I mean the universe, but we cannot understand it if we do not first learn the language and grasp the symbols in which it is written. This book is written in the mathematical language, and the symbols are triangles, circles, and other geometrical figures, without whose help it is humanly impossible to comprehend a single word of it, and without which one wanders in vain through a dark labyrinth.' – Galileo (1623), ''[[The Assayer]]''"</ref> and Newton. Some theorists, like [[Hilary Putnam]] and [[Penelope Maddy]], hold that logical truths, and therefore mathematical reasoning, depend on the [[empirical]] world. This is usually combined with the claim that the laws of logic express universal regularities found in the structural features of the world, which may explain the peculiar relation between these fields.
Beginning in 1900, [[Max Planck|Planck]], Einstein, [[Niels Bohr]], and others developed [[quantum]] theories to explain various anomalous experimental results by introducing discrete energy levels. In 1925, [[Werner Heisenberg|Heisenberg]] and 1926, [[Erwin Schrödinger|Schrödinger]] and [[Paul Dirac]] formulated [[quantum mechanics]], which explained the preceding heuristic quantum theories. In quantum mechanics, the outcomes of physical measurements are inherently [[probability|probabilistic]]; the theory describes the calculation of these probabilities. It successfully describes the behavior of matter at small distance scales. During the 1920s [[Erwin Schrödinger]], [[Werner Heisenberg]], and [[Max Born]] were able to formulate a consistent picture of the chemical behavior of matter, a complete theory of the electronic structure of the atom, as a byproduct of the quantum theory.[[Image:Feynman and Oppenheimer at Los Alamos.jpg|thumb|[[Richard Feynman]] (center) with [[J. Robert Oppenheimer]] (right) relaxing at a [[Los Alamos National Laboratory|Los Alamos]] social function during the [[Manhattan Project]].]]


Physics uses mathematics<ref name="applicationsofmathematics">{{cite web |url=http://www.math.niu.edu/~rusin/known-math/index/tour_sci.html |title=Applications of Mathematics to the Sciences |date=25 January 2000 |access-date=30 January 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150510112012/http://www.math.niu.edu/~rusin/known-math/index/tour_sci.html |archive-date=10 May 2015 |url-status=dead}}</ref> to organise and formulate experimental results. From those results, [[analytic solution|precise]] or [[simulation#Computer simulation|estimated]] solutions are obtained, or quantitative results, from which new predictions can be made and experimentally confirmed or negated. The results from physics experiments are numerical data, with their [[units of measure]] and estimates of the errors in the measurements. Technologies based on mathematics, like [[scientific computing|computation]] have made [[computational physics]] an active area of research.
[[Quantum field theory]] was formulated in order to extend quantum mechanics to be consistent with special relativity. It was devised in the late 1940s with work by [[Richard Feynman]], [[Julian Schwinger]], [[Sin-Itiro Tomonaga]], and [[Freeman Dyson]]. They formulated the theory of [[quantum electrodynamics]], which describes the electromagnetic interaction, and successfully explained the "[[Lamb shift]]". Quantum field theory provided the framework for modern [[particle physics]], which studies [[fundamental force]]s and elementary particles.


[[File:Mathematical Physics and other sciences.png|thumb|The distinction between mathematics and physics is clear-cut, but not always obvious, especially in mathematical physics.]]
[[Chen Ning Yang]] and [[Tsung-Dao Lee]], in the 1950s, discovered an unexpected [[asymmetry]]<ref>[http://cwp.library.ucla.edu/Phase2/Wu,_Chien_Shiung@841234567.html C.S. Wu's contribution to the overthrow of the conservation of parity]</ref> in the decay of a [[subatomic particle]]. In 1954, Yang and [[Robert Mills (physicist)|Robert Mills]] then developed a class of [[gauge theory|gauge theories]]<ref>
Yang, Mills 1954 ''[[Physical Review]]'' '''95''', 631; Yang, Mills 1954 ''Physical Review'' '''96''', 191.
</ref> which provided the framework for understanding the nuclear forces. The theory for the [[strong nuclear force]] was first proposed by [[Murray Gell-Mann]]. The [[electroweak force]], the unification of the [[weak nuclear force]] with electromagnetism, was proposed by [[Sheldon Lee Glashow]], [[Abdus Salam]] and [[Steven Weinberg]] and confirmed in 1964 by [[James Watson Cronin]] and [[Val Fitch]]. This led to the so-called [[Standard Model]] of particle physics in the 1970s, which successfully describes all the elementary particles observed to date.


[[Ontology]] is a prerequisite for physics, but not for mathematics. It means physics is ultimately concerned with descriptions of the real world, while mathematics is concerned with abstract patterns, even beyond the real world. Thus physics statements are synthetic, while mathematical statements are analytic. Mathematics contains hypotheses, while physics contains theories. Mathematics statements have to be only logically true, while predictions of physics statements must match observed and experimental data.
Quantum mechanics also provided the theoretical tools for [[condensed matter physics]], whose largest branch is [[solid state physics]]. It studies the physical behavior of solids and liquids, including phenomena such as [[crystal structure]]s, [[semiconductor|semiconductivity]], and [[superconductor|superconductivity]]. The pioneers of condensed matter physics include [[Felix Bloch|Bloch]], who created a quantum mechanical description of the behavior of electrons in crystal structures in 1928. The transistor was developed by physicists [[John Bardeen]], [[Walter Houser Brattain]] and [[William Bradford Shockley]] in 1947 at [[Bell Labs|Bell Telephone Laboratories]].


The distinction is clear-cut, but not always obvious. For example, [[mathematical physics]] is the application of mathematics in physics. Its methods are mathematical, but its subject is physical.<ref name="jmp-def">{{cite web | url=https://www.researchgate.net/journal/0022-2488_Journal_of_Mathematical_Physics | title=Journal of Mathematical Physics | access-date=31 March 2014 | quote=[Journal of Mathematical Physics] purpose is the publication of papers in mathematical physics—that is, the application of mathematics to problems in physics and the development of mathematical methods suitable for such applications and for the formulation of physical theories. | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140818231853/http://www.researchgate.net/journal/0022-2488_Journal_of_Mathematical_Physics | archive-date=18 August 2014 | df=dmy-all }}</ref> The problems in this field start with a "[[Boundary condition|mathematical model of a physical situation]]" (system) and a "mathematical description of a physical law" that will be applied to that system. Every mathematical statement used for solving has a hard-to-find physical meaning. The final mathematical solution has an easier-to-find meaning, because it is what the solver is looking for.{{clarify|date=August 2015}}
The two themes of the 20th century, general relativity and quantum mechanics, appear inconsistent with each other.<ref>"There is as yet no logically consistent and complete relativistic quantum theory." [[V. B. Berestetskii]], [[E. M. Lifshitz]], [[L. P. Pitaevskii]] (1971, 1979) ''Relativistic Quantum Theory, Volume 4, Part 1, Course of Theoretical Physics'' ISBN 0080160255 p. 4 </ref> General relativity describes the [[universe]] on the scale of [[planet]]s and [[solar system]]s while quantum mechanics operates on sub-atomic scales. [[Quantum gravity]] is the attempt to resolve these theories into a single one. Popular approaches to quantum gravity include [[string theory]] and [[loop quantum gravity]]. These theories have yielded promising results, but neither has sufficient experimental verification to be considered a solution of this problem.


===Distinction between fundamental vs. applied physics===
==Branches of Physics==
{{Main|Applied physics}}
{{further|[[Classical physics]], [[Modern physics]], [[Topic outline of physics]]}}
[[Image:Modernphysicsfields.svg|thumb|350px|right|Domains of major fields of physics]]


Physics is a branch of [[fundamental science]] (also called basic science). Physics is also called "''the'' fundamental science" because all branches of natural science including chemistry, astronomy, geology, and biology are constrained by laws of physics.<ref name="feynmanleightonsands1963v1ch3">[https://feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/I_03.html The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. I Ch. 3: The Relation of Physics to Other Sciences]; see also [[reductionism]] and [[special sciences]]</ref> Similarly, chemistry is often called [[the central science]] because of its role in linking the physical sciences. For example, chemistry studies properties, structures, and [[chemical reaction|reactions]] of matter (chemistry's focus on the molecular and atomic scale [[Difference between chemistry and physics|distinguishes it from physics]]). Structures are formed because particles exert electrical forces on each other, properties include physical characteristics of given substances, and reactions are bound by laws of physics, like [[conservation of energy]], [[Conservation of mass|mass]], and [[charge conservation|charge]]. Fundamental physics seeks to better explain and understand phenomena in all spheres, without a specific practical application as a goal, other than the deeper insight into the phenomema themselves.
While physics deals with a wide variety of systems, there are certain theories that are used by all physicists. Each of these theories were experimentally tested numerous times and found correct as an approximation of Nature (within a certain domain of validity). For instance, the theory of [[classical mechanics]] accurately describes the motion of objects, provided they are much larger than [[atom]]s and moving at much less than the [[speed of light]]. These theories continue to be areas of active research; for instance, a remarkable aspect of classical mechanics known as [[chaos theory|chaos]] was discovered in the 20th century, three centuries after the original formulation of classical mechanics by [[Isaac Newton]] (1642–1727). These "central theories" are important tools for research into more specialized topics, and any physicist, regardless of his or her specialization, is expected to be literate in them.


[[File:Prediction of sound scattering from Schroeder Diffuser.jpg|thumb|upright|left|An [[acoustic engineering]] model of sound reflecting from an acoustic diffuser, implemented with classical physics]]
===Classical mechanics===
[[File:Newton Cannon.svg|thumb|[[Newton's cannonball]], an [[artificial satellite]]]]
[[File:Archimedes-screw one-screw-threads with-ball 3D-view animated small.gif|thumb|[[Archimedes' screw]], a [[simple machine]] for lifting]]
[[File:Mechanics Overview Table.jpg|thumb|Branches of classical mechanics]]
{{main|Classical mechanics}}
[[Classical mechanics]] is a model of the physics of [[force]]s acting upon bodies. It is often referred to as "Newtonian mechanics" after [[Isaac Newton]] and his [[Newton's laws of motion|laws of motion]]. Mechanics is subdivided into [[statics]], which models objects at rest, [[kinematics]], which models objects in motion, and [[dynamics (mechanics)|dynamics]], which models objects subjected to forces. The classical mechanics of continuous and deformable objects is [[continuum mechanics]], which can itself be broken down into [[solid mechanics]] and [[fluid mechanics]] according to the state of matter being studied. The latter, the mechanics of [[liquid]]s and [[gas]]es, includes [[hydrostatics]], [[hydrodynamics]], [[pneumatics]], [[aerodynamics]], and other fields.
An important concept of mechanics is the identification of conserved [[energy]] and [[momentum]], which lead to the [[Lagrangian mechanics|Lagrangian]] and [[Hamiltonian mechanics|Hamiltonian]] reformulations of Newton's laws. [[Liouville's theorem (Hamiltonian)|Liouville's theorem]] for statistical and Hamiltonian mechanics is a classical nineteenth century result which describes the behavior of the [[phase space]] [[distribution function]]. Liouville's theorem has a suggestive formulation, the [[Poisson bracket]], which encodes [[Hamilton's equations]] of classical mechanics, and has analogies with the [[commutator]] in quantum mechanics.


Applied physics is a general term for physics research and development that is intended for a particular use. An applied physics curriculum usually contains a few classes in an applied discipline, like geology or electrical engineering. It usually differs from engineering in that an applied physicist may not be designing something in particular, but rather is using physics or conducting physics research with the aim of developing new technologies or solving a problem.
A relatively recent result of considerations concerning the dynamics of nonlinear systems is [[chaos theory]], the study of systems in which small changes in a variable may have large effects.


The approach is similar to that of [[applied mathematics]]. Applied physicists use physics in scientific research. For instance, people working on [[accelerator physics]] might seek to build better [[particle detector]]s for research in theoretical physics.
===Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics===
{{main|Thermodynamics|Statistical mechanics}}
[[Image:Triple expansion engine animation.gif|thumb|right|300px|Typical [[thermodynamic system]] - heat moves from hot (boiler) to cold (condenser) and [[Work (thermodynamics)|work]] is extracted]]


Physics is used heavily in engineering. For example, statics, a subfield of [[mechanics]], is used in the building of bridges and other static structures. The understanding and use of acoustics results in sound control and better concert halls; similarly, the use of optics creates better optical devices. An understanding of physics makes for more realistic [[flight simulator]]s, video games, and movies, and is often critical in [[forensic]] investigations.
The first chapter of ''[[The Feynman Lectures on Physics]]'' is about the [[Atomic theory#Modern atomic theory|existence of atoms]], which Feynman considered to be the most compact statement of physics, from which science could easily result even if all other knowledge was lost.<ref name = "feynman"/> By modeling matter as collections of hard spheres, it is possible to describe the [[kinetic theory of gases]], upon which classical thermodynamics is based.
[[File:Military laser experiment.jpg|thumb|Experiment using a [[laser]]]]


With the [[Uniformitarianism (science)|standard consensus]] that the [[Scientific law|laws]] of physics are universal and do not change with time, physics can be used to study things that would ordinarily be mired in [[uncertainty]]. For example, in the study of the origin of the Earth, a physicist can reasonably model Earth's mass, temperature, and rate of rotation, as a function of time allowing the extrapolation forward or backward in time and so predict future or prior events. It also allows for simulations in engineering that speed up the development of a new technology.
[[Thermodynamics]] studies the effects of changes in [[temperature]], [[pressure]], and [[volume]] on [[physical system]]s at the [[macroscopic]] scale, and the transfer of energy as [[heat]].<ref name="Perrot" >{{cite book | author=Perrot, Pierre | title=A to Z of Thermodynamics | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1998 | isbn=0-19-856552-6}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | author=Clark, John, O.E.| title=The Essential Dictionary of Science | publisher=Barnes & Noble Books | year=2004 | isbn=0-7607-4616-8}}</ref> Historically, thermodynamics developed out of need to increase the [[thermodynamic efficiency|efficiency]] of early [[steam engine]]s.<ref>{{cite book | last = Clausius | first = Ruldolf | title = On the Motive Power of Heat, and on the Laws which can be deduced from it for the Theory of Heat | publisher = Poggendorff's ''Annalen der Physick'', LXXIX (Dover Reprint) | year = 1850 | isbn = 0-486-59065-8}}</ref>


There is also considerable [[interdisciplinarity]], so many other important fields are influenced by physics (e.g., the fields of [[econophysics]] and [[sociophysics]]).
The starting point for most thermodynamic considerations are the [[laws of thermodynamics]], which postulate that [[energy]] can be exchanged between physical systems as heat or [[Mechanical work|work]].<ref>{{cite book | author=Van Ness, H.C. | title=Understanding Thermodynamics | publisher=Dover Publications, Inc. | year=1969 | isbn=0-486-63277-6}}</ref> They also postulate the existence of a quantity named [[entropy]], which can be defined for any system.<ref>{{cite book | author=Dugdale, J.S. | title=Entropy and its Physical Meaning | publisher=Taylor and Francis | year=1998 | isbn=0-7484-0569-0}}</ref> In thermodynamics, interactions between large ensembles of objects are studied and categorized. Central to this are the concepts of [[System (thermodynamics)|system]] and [[Surroundings (thermodynamics)|surroundings]]. A system is composed of particles, whose average motions define its properties, which in turn are related to one another through [[Equation of state|equations of state]]. Properties can be combined to express [[internal energy]] and [[thermodynamic potentials]], which are useful for determining conditions for [[Dynamic equilibrium|equilibrium]] and [[spontaneous process]]es.


==Research==
===Electromagnetism===
[[Image:Maxwell's Equations.png|thumb|225px|[[Maxwell's equations]] of [[electromagnetism]].]]
{{main|Electromagnetism}}
{{see also|Optics}}


===Scientific method===
[[Electromagnetism]] describes the interaction of charged particles with electric and magnetic [[field (physics)|field]]s. It can be divided into [[electrostatics]], the study of interactions between [[Electric charge|charge]]s at rest, and [[electrodynamics]], the study of interactions between moving charges and [[radiation]]. The classical theory of electromagnetism is based on the [[Lorentz force]] law and [[Maxwell's equations]]. [[Light]] is an oscillating [[electromagnetic field]] that is radiated from accelerating charged particles. Thus, all of [[optics]], the study of the nature and propagation of light, can be reduced to electromagnetic interactions. Two major fields of optics are [[geometric optics]] or "classical optics", and [[physical optics]] which studies the electromagnetic properties of light to achieve greater understanding of phenomena such as interference, diffraction, and polarization.
Physicists use the scientific method to test the validity of a [[physical theory]]. By using a methodical approach to compare the implications of a theory with the conclusions drawn from its related experiments and observations, physicists are better able to test the validity of a theory in a logical, unbiased, and repeatable way. To that end, experiments are performed and observations are made in order to determine the validity or invalidity of a theory.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ellis |first1=G. |last2=Silk |first2=J. |title=Scientific method: Defend the integrity of physics |journal=Nature |date=16 December 2014 |volume=516 |issue=7531 |pages=321–323 |doi=10.1038/516321a |bibcode=2014Natur.516..321E |pmid=25519115 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


A scientific law is a concise verbal or mathematical statement of a relation that expresses a fundamental principle of some theory, such as Newton's law of universal gravitation.<ref name="honderich1995pp474-476">{{harvnb |Honderich|1995|pp=474–476}}</ref>
A more recent development is [[quantum electrodynamics]], which incorporates the laws of [[Quantum field theory|quantum theory]] in order to explain the interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter. Relativistic electrodynamics accounts for [[special relativity|relativistic]] corrections to the motions of charged particles when their speeds approach the speed of light. It applies to phenomena involved with [[particle accelerators]] and electron tubes carrying high [[voltages]] and [[Electric current|current]]s.


===Relativity===
===Theory and experiment===
{{Main|Theoretical physics|Experimental physics}}
{{main|Special relativity|General relativity}}
[[File:Bruce McCandless II during EVA in 1984.jpg|thumb|right|The [[astronaut]] and Earth are both in [[free fall]]. (Pictured: Astronaut Bruce McCandless.) ]]
[[File:Lightning in Arlington.jpg|thumb|right|[[Lightning]] is an [[electric current]].]]


Theorists seek to develop [[mathematical model]]s that both agree with existing experiments and successfully predict future experimental results, while [[Experimentalism|experimentalists]] devise and perform experiments to test theoretical predictions and explore new phenomena. Although [[theory]] and experiment are developed separately, they strongly affect and depend upon each other. Progress in physics frequently comes about when experimental results defy explanation by existing theories, prompting intense focus on applicable modelling, and when new theories generate experimentally testable [[prediction]]s, which inspire the development of new experiments (and often related equipment).<ref>{{cite web |date=June 2015 |title=Has theoretical physics moved too far away from experiments? Is the field entering a crisis and, if so, what should we do about it? |url=https://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/research/conferences/convergence/roundtable-discussion-questions/has-theoretical-physics-moved-too |publisher=[[Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160421064320/http://www.perimeterinstitute.ca/research/conferences/convergence/roundtable-discussion-questions/has-theoretical-physics-moved-too |archive-date=21 April 2016 }}</ref>
The [[Theory of relativity|special theory of relativity]] enjoys a relationship with electromagnetism and mechanics; that is, the [[principle of relativity]] and the [[principle of stationary action]] in mechanics can be used to derive [[Maxwell's equations]],<ref>Landau and Lifshitz (1951, 1962), ''The Classical Theory of Fields'', Library of Congress Card Number 62-9181, Chapters 1–4 (3rd edition is ISBN 0080160190)</ref><ref>Corson and Lorrain, ''Electromagnetic Fields and Waves'' ISBN 0716718235</ref> and ''vice versa''.


[[Physicist]]s who work at the interplay of theory and experiment are called [[Phenomenology (particle physics)|phenomenologists]], who study complex phenomena observed in experiment and work to relate them to a [[Theory of everything|fundamental theory]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Phenomenology |url=https://www.mpp.mpg.de/english/research/theory/phenomenologie/index.html |publisher=[[Max Planck Institute for Physics]] |access-date=22 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160307105406/https://www.mpp.mpg.de/english/research/theory/phenomenologie/index.html |archive-date=7 March 2016 }}</ref>
The theory of [[special relativity]] was proposed in 1905 by [[Albert Einstein]] in his article "[[Annus Mirabilis Papers#Special relativity|On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies]]". The title of the article refers to the fact that special relativity resolves an inconsistency between [[Maxwell's equations]] and classical mechanics. The theory is based on [[postulates of special relativity|two postulates]]: (1) that the mathematical forms of the [[Physical law|laws of physics]] are invariant in all [[inertial frame of reference|inertial systems]]; and (2) that the [[speed of light]] in a [[vacuum]] is constant and independent of the source or observer. Reconciling the two postulates requires a unification of [[space]] and [[time]] into the frame-dependent concept of [[spacetime]].


Theoretical physics has historically taken inspiration from philosophy; electromagnetism was unified this way.{{efn|See, for example, the influence of [[Immanuel Kant|Kant]] and [[Johann Wilhelm Ritter|Ritter]] on [[Hans Christian Ørsted|Ørsted]].}} Beyond the known universe, the field of theoretical physics also deals with hypothetical issues,{{efn|Concepts which are denoted ''hypothetical'' can change with time. For example, the [[atom]] of nineteenth-century physics was denigrated by some, including [[Ernst Mach]]'s critique of [[Ludwig Boltzmann]]'s formulation of [[statistical mechanics]]. By the end of World War II, the atom was no longer deemed hypothetical.}} such as [[Many-worlds interpretation|parallel universes]], a [[multiverse]], and [[higher dimension]]s. Theorists invoke these ideas in hopes of solving particular problems with existing theories; they then explore the consequences of these ideas and work toward making testable predictions.
[[General relativity]] is the [[Geometry|geometrical]] [[theory]] of [[gravitation]] published by [[Albert Einstein]] in 1915/16.<ref name=Ein1915>{{cite journal|last=Einstein| first=Albert| authorlink = Albert Einstein| date=November 25, 1915| title=Die Feldgleichungen der Gravitation| journal=Sitzungsberichte der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin| pages=844–847 | url=http://nausikaa2.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/cgi-bin/toc/toc.x.cgi?dir=6E3MAXK4&step=thumb | accessdate=2006-09-12}}</ref><ref name = Ein1916> {{cite journal| last = Einstein| first = Albert| title = The Foundation of the General Theory of Relativity| journal = Annalen der Physik| volume = | issue = | pages = | date = 1916| publisher = | url = http://www.alberteinstein.info/gallery/gtext3.html| format = PDF| id = | accessdate = 2006-09-03 }} </ref> It unifies [[special relativity]], [[Newton's law of universal gravitation]], and the insight that gravitation can be described by the [[curvature]] of [[space]] and [[time]]. In general relativity, the curvature of [[space-time]] is produced by the [[energy]] of matter and radiation.


Experimental physics expands, and is expanded by, engineering and technology. Experimental physicists who are involved in [[basic research]] design and perform experiments with equipment such as particle accelerators and [[laser]]s, whereas those involved in [[applied research]] often work in industry, developing technologies such as [[magnetic resonance imaging]] (MRI) and [[transistor]]s. [[Richard Feynman|Feynman]] has noted that experimentalists may seek areas that have not been explored well by theorists.<ref name="feynman1965p157-experiment">{{harvnb|Feynman|1965|p=157}} "In fact experimenters have a certain individual character. They ... very often do their experiments in a region in which people know the theorist has not made any guesses."</ref>
===Quantum mechanics===
{{main|Quantum mechanics}}
[[Image:HAtomOrbitals.png|thumb|right|225px|The first few [[hydrogen atom]] [[Electron configuration|electron orbital]]s shown as cross-sections with color-coded [[probability amplitude|probability density]]]]
[[Image:SchrodingerEquation.PNG.svg|thumb|right|225px|[[Schrödinger equation]] of [[quantum mechanics]]]]


===Scope and aims===
[[Quantum mechanics]] is the branch of physics treating [[atom]]ic and [[subatomic particle|subatomic]] systems and their interaction with [[radiation]]. It is based on the observation that all forms of energy are released in discrete units or bundles called "[[quantum|quanta]]". Remarkably, quantum theory typically permits only [[probability|probable]] or [[statistics|statistical]] calculation of the observed features of subatomic particles, understood in terms of [[wavefunction]]s. The [[Schrödinger equation]] plays the role in quantum mechanics that [[Newton's laws of motion|Newton's laws]] and [[conservation of energy]] serve in classical mechanics — i.e., it predicts the future behavior of a [[dynamical system|dynamic system]] — and is a [[wave equation]] that is used to solve for wavefunctions.
[[File:Acceleration components.JPG|thumb|left|Physics involves modeling the natural world with theory, usually quantitative. Here, the path of a particle is modeled with the mathematics of [[calculus]] to explain its behavior: the purview of the branch of physics known as [[mechanics]].]]


Physics covers a wide range of [[phenomenon|phenomena]], from [[elementary particle]]s (such as [[quark]]s, [[neutrino]]s, and [[electron]]s) to the largest [[supercluster]]s of galaxies. Included in these phenomena are the most basic objects composing all other things. Therefore, physics is sometimes called the "fundamental science".<ref name="feynmanleightonsands1963v1ch3" /> Physics aims to describe the various phenomena that occur in nature in terms of simpler phenomena. Thus, physics aims to both connect the things observable to humans to root causes, and then connect these causes together.
For example, the light, or electromagnetic radiation emitted or absorbed by an atom has only certain [[frequency|frequencies]] (or [[wavelength]]s), as can be seen from the [[Emission spectrum|line spectrum]] associated with the chemical element represented by that atom. The quantum theory shows that those frequencies correspond to definite energies of the light quanta, or [[photon]]s, and result from the fact that the [[electron]]s of the atom can have only certain allowed energy values, or levels; when an electron changes from one allowed level to another, a quantum of energy is emitted or absorbed whose frequency is directly proportional to the energy difference between the two levels. The [[photoelectric effect]] further confirmed the quantization of light.
In 1924, [[Louis de Broglie]] proposed that not only do light waves sometimes exhibit particle-like properties, but particles may also exhibit wavelike properties. Two different formulations of quantum mechanics were presented following de Broglie’s suggestion. The [[wave mechanics]] of [[Erwin Schrödinger]] (1926) involves the use of a mathematical entity, the wave function, which is related to the probability of finding a particle at a given point in space. The [[matrix mechanics]] of [[Werner Heisenberg]] (1925) makes no mention of wave functions or similar concepts but was shown to be mathematically equivalent to Schrödinger’s theory. A particularly important discovery of the quantum theory is the [[uncertainty principle]], enunciated by Heisenberg in 1927, which places an absolute theoretical limit on the accuracy of certain measurements; as a result, the assumption by earlier scientists that the physical state of a system could be measured exactly and used to predict future states had to be abandoned. Quantum mechanics was combined with the theory of relativity in the formulation of [[Paul Dirac]]. Other developments include [[quantum statistics]], [[quantum electrodynamics]], concerned with interactions between charged particles and electromagnetic fields; and its generalization, [[quantum field theory]].


For example, the [[History of China|ancient Chinese]] observed that certain rocks ([[lodestone]] and [[magnetite]]) were attracted to one another by an invisible force. This effect was later called magnetism, which was first rigorously studied in the 17th century. But even before the Chinese discovered magnetism, the [[Ancient Greece|ancient Greeks]] knew of other objects such as [[amber]], that when rubbed with fur would cause a similar invisible attraction between the two.<ref name=stewart>{{cite book |last=Stewart |first=J. |year=2001 |title=Intermediate Electromagnetic Theory |page=50 |publisher=World Scientific |isbn=978-981-02-4471-2}}</ref> This was also first studied rigorously in the 17th century and came to be called electricity. Thus, physics had come to understand two observations of nature in terms of some root cause (electricity and magnetism). However, further work in the 19th century revealed that these two forces were just two different aspects of one force—[[electromagnetism]]. This process of "unifying" forces continues today, and electromagnetism and the [[weak nuclear force]] are now considered to be two aspects of the [[electroweak interaction]]. Physics hopes to find an ultimate reason (theory of everything) for why nature is as it is (see section ''[[#Current research|Current research]]'' below for more information).<ref>{{cite book |last=Weinberg |first=S. |year=1993 |title=Dreams of a Final Theory: The Search for the Fundamental Laws of Nature |publisher=Hutchinson Radius |isbn=978-0-09-177395-3}}</ref>
{{hidden|Table of the major branches of physics, and concepts they employ|{{:Physics/Theories}}|bg1=#f2f2f2}}


==Research fields==
===Research fields===
Contemporary research in physics can be broadly divided into [[condensed matter physics]]; [[atomic, molecular, and optical physics]]; [[particle physics]]; [[astrophysics]]; [[geophysics]] and [[biophysics]]. Some physics departments also support research in [[Physics education]]. Since the twentieth century, the individual fields of physics have become increasingly [[specialization|specialized]], and today most physicists work in a single field for their entire careers. "Universalists" such as [[Albert Einstein]] (1879–1955) and [[Lev Landau]] (1908–1968), who worked in multiple fields of physics, are now very rare.<ref>
Contemporary research in physics can be broadly divided into [[Nuclear physics|nuclear]] and [[particle physics]]; [[condensed matter physics]]; [[atomic, molecular, and optical physics]]; [[astrophysics]]; and applied physics. Some physics departments also support [[physics education research]] and [[physics outreach]].<ref>{{cite web |last=Redish |first=E. |title=Science and Physics Education Homepages |url=https://www.physics.umd.edu/perg/homepages.htm |publisher=University of Maryland Physics Education Research Group |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160728005227/http://www.physics.umd.edu/perg/homepages.htm |archive-date=28 July 2016 }}</ref>
Yet, universalism is encouraged in the culture of physics. For example, the [[World Wide Web]], which was innovated at [[CERN]] by [[Tim Berners-Lee]], was created in service to the computer infrastructure of CERN, and was/is intended for use by physicists worldwide. The same might be said for [[arXiv.org]]
</ref>{{hidden|<span style"border: 1px #aaa solid">Table of the major fields of physics, along with their subfields and the theories they employ</span>|{{:Physics/Subfields}}|bg1=#f2f2f2}}


Since the 20th century, the individual fields of physics have become increasingly specialised, and today most physicists work in a single field for their entire careers. "Universalists" such as Einstein (1879–1955) and [[Lev Landau]] (1908–1968), who worked in multiple fields of physics, are now very rare.{{efn|Yet, universalism is encouraged in the culture of physics. For example, the [[World Wide Web]], which was innovated at [[CERN]] by [[Tim Berners-Lee]], was created in service to the computer infrastructure of CERN, and was/is intended for use by physicists worldwide. The same might be said for [[arXiv.org]]}}
====Condensed matter====
{{main|Condensed matter physics}}
[[Image:Bose Einstein condensate.png|right|thumb|350px|Velocity-distribution data of a gas of [[rubidium]] atoms, confirming the discovery of a new phase of matter, the [[Bose–Einstein condensate]]]]


The major fields of physics, along with their subfields and the theories and concepts they employ, are shown in the following table.
[[Condensed matter physics]] is the field of physics that deals with the macroscopic physical properties of [[matter]]. In particular, it is concerned with the "condensed" [[phase (matter)|phases]] that appear whenever the number of constituents in a system is extremely large and the interactions between the constituents are strong. The most familiar examples of condensed phases are [[Solid-state physics|solids]] and [[liquid]]s, which arise from the bonding and [[electromagnetic force]] between [[atom]]s. More exotic condensed phases include the [[superfluid]] and the [[Bose-Einstein condensate]] found in certain atomic systems at very low [[temperature]], the [[superconductivity|superconducting]] phase exhibited by [[conduction electron]]s in certain materials, and the [[ferromagnet]]ic and [[antiferromagnet]]ic phases of [[spin (physics)|spin]]s on [[crystal lattice|atomic lattices]].
{{Subfields of physics}}


====Nuclear and particle====
Condensed matter physics is by far the largest field of contemporary physics. By one estimate, one third of all American [[physicist]]s identify themselves as condensed matter physicists.{{Fact|date=December 2008}} Historically, condensed matter physics grew out of [[solid-state physics]], which is now considered one of its main subfields. The term ''condensed matter physics'' was apparently coined by [[Philip Warren Anderson|Philip Anderson]] when he renamed his research group — previously ''solid-state theory'' — in 1967. In 1978, the Division of Solid State Physics at the [[American Physical Society]] was renamed as the Division of Condensed Matter Physics.<ref name=dcmp_governance>{{cite web | url = http://dcmp.bc.edu/page.php?name=governance_history | title = Division of Condensed Matter Physics Governance History | accessdate = 2007-02-13}}</ref> Condensed matter physics has a large overlap with [[chemistry]], [[materials science]], [[nanotechnology]] and [[engineering]].
{{Main|Particle physics|Nuclear physics}}
[[File:CMS Higgs-event.jpg|thumb|A simulated event in the CMS detector of the [[Large Hadron Collider]], featuring a possible appearance of the [[Higgs boson]]]]


Particle physics is the study of the elementary constituents of [[matter]] and energy and the [[Fundamental interaction|interactions]] between them.<ref name="aps-dpf">{{cite web|title=Division of Particles & Fields |url=http://www.aps.org/units/dpf/index.cfm |publisher=American Physical Society |access-date=18 October 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160829105655/http://www.aps.org/units/dpf/index.cfm |archive-date=29 August 2016 }}</ref> In addition, particle physicists design and develop the high-energy accelerators,<ref name="halpern2010">{{harvnb|Halpern|2010}}</ref> detectors,<ref name="grupen1999">{{harvnb|Grupen|1999}}</ref> and [[Computational particle physics|computer programs]]<ref name="walsh2012">{{harvnb|Walsh|2012}}</ref> necessary for this research. The field is also called "high-energy physics" because many elementary particles do not occur naturally but are created only during high-energy [[collision]]s of other particles.<ref name="iop-hepp">{{cite web|title=High Energy Particle Physics Group|url=http://www.iop.org/activity/groups/subject/hepp/index.html|publisher=Institute of Physics|access-date=18 October 2012|archive-date=29 May 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190529024813/http://www.iop.org/activity/groups/subject/hepp/index.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
====Atomic, molecular, and optical physics====
{{main|Atomic, molecular, and optical physics}}
[[Atom]]ic, [[Molecule|molecular]], and [[Optics|optical]] physics (AMO) is the study of [[matter]]-matter and [[light]]-matter interactions on the scale of single [[atom]]s or structures containing a few atoms. The three areas are grouped together because of their interrelationships, the similarity of methods used, and the commonality of the [[energy]] scales that are relevant. All three areas include both [[classical physics|classical]] and [[quantum physics|quantum]] treatments; they can treat their subject from a microscopic view (in contrast to a macroscopic view).


Currently, the interactions of elementary particles and [[Field (physics)|fields]] are described by the [[Standard Model]].<ref name="oerter2006">{{harvnb|Oerter|2006}}</ref> The model accounts for the 12 known particles of matter ([[quark]]s and [[lepton]]s) that interact via the [[strong nuclear force|strong]], weak, and electromagnetic [[fundamental force]]s.<ref name="oerter2006" /> Dynamics are described in terms of matter particles exchanging [[gauge boson]]s ([[gluon]]s, [[W and Z bosons]], and [[photon]]s, respectively).<ref name="gribbin1998">{{harvnb|Gribbin|Gribbin|Gribbin|1998}}</ref> The Standard Model also predicts a particle known as the Higgs boson.<ref name="oerter2006" /> In July 2012 CERN, the European laboratory for particle physics, announced the detection of a particle consistent with the Higgs boson,<ref name="eonr-higgs">{{cite web |title=CERN experiments observe particle consistent with long-sought Higgs boson |url=http://press-archived.web.cern.ch/press-archived/PressReleases/Releases2012/PR17.12E.html |publisher=[[CERN]] |access-date=18 October 2012 |date=4 July 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121114084952/http://press-archived.web.cern.ch/press-archived/PressReleases/Releases2012/PR17.12E.html |archive-date=14 November 2012 }}</ref> an integral part of the [[Higgs mechanism]].
[[Atomic physics]] studies the [[electron]] hull of [[atom]]s. Current research focuses on activities in quantum control, cooling and trapping of atoms and ions, low-temperature collision dynamics, the collective behavior of atoms in weakly interacting gases (Bose-Einstein Condensates and dilute Fermi degenerate systems), precision measurements of fundamental constants, and the effects of electron correlation on structure and dynamics. Atomic physics is influenced by the [[Atomic nucleus|nucleus]] (see, e.g., [[hyperfine splitting]]), but intra-nuclear phenomenon such as [[nuclear fission|fission]] and [[nuclear fusion|fusion]] are considered part of [[high energy physics]].


Nuclear physics is the field of physics that studies the constituents and interactions of [[atomic nuclei]]. The most commonly known applications of nuclear physics are [[nuclear power]] generation and [[nuclear weapons]] technology, but the research has provided application in many fields, including those in [[nuclear medicine]] and magnetic resonance imaging, [[ion implantation]] in [[materials engineering]], and [[radiocarbon dating]] in geology and [[archaeology]].
[[Molecular physics]] focuses on multi-atomic structures and their internal and external interactions with matter and light. [[Optical physics]] is distinct from [[optics]] in that it tends to focus not on the control of classical light fields by macroscopic objects, but on the fundamental properties of [[optical field]]s and their interactions with matter in the microscopic realm.


====High energy/particle physics====
====Atomic, molecular, and optical====
{{main|Particle physics}}
{{Main|Atomic, molecular, and optical physics}}
[[Image:CMS Higgs-event.jpg|thumb|A simulated event in the CMS detector of the [[Large Hadron Collider]], featuring the appearance of the Higgs boson.]]


Atomic, [[Molecule|molecular]], and optical physics (AMO) is the study of matter—matter and light—matter interactions on the scale of single atoms and molecules. The three areas are grouped together because of their interrelationships, the similarity of methods used, and the commonality of their relevant energy scales. All three areas include both classical, semi-classical and [[quantum mechanics|quantum]] treatments; they can treat their subject from a microscopic view (in contrast to a macroscopic view).
[[Particle physics]] is the study of the [[elementary particle|elementary]] constituents of [[matter]] and [[energy]], and the interactions between them. It may also be called "high energy physics", because many elementary particles do not occur naturally, but are created only during high energy [[collision]]s of other particles, as can be detected in [[particle accelerator]]s.


Atomic physics studies the [[electron shell]]s of atoms. Current research focuses on activities in quantum control, cooling and trapping of atoms and ions,<ref>{{cite web |title=Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics |website=MIT Department of Physics |url=http://web.mit.edu/physics/research/abcp/areas.html#amo |access-date=21 February 2014 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140227043906/http://web.mit.edu/physics/research/abcp/areas.html#amo |archive-date=27 February 2014 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Korea University, Physics AMO Group |url=http://physics.korea.ac.kr/research/research_amo.php |access-date=21 February 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140301112653/http://physics.korea.ac.kr/research/research_amo.php |archive-date=1 March 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Aarhus Universitet, AMO Group |url=http://phys.au.dk/forskning/forskningsomraader/amo/ |access-date=21 February 2014 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140307062146/http://phys.au.dk/forskning/forskningsomraader/amo/ |archive-date=7 March 2014 }}</ref> low-temperature collision dynamics and the effects of electron correlation on structure and dynamics. Atomic physics is influenced by the [[Atomic nucleus|nucleus]] (see [[hyperfine splitting]]), but intra-nuclear phenomena such as [[nuclear fission|fission]] and [[nuclear fusion|fusion]] are considered part of nuclear physics.
Currently, the interactions of elementary particles are described by the [[Standard Model]]. The model accounts for the 12 known particles of matter that interact via the [[strong nuclear force|strong]], [[weak nuclear force|weak]], and [[electromagnetism|electromagnetic]] [[fundamental force]]s. Dynamics are described in terms of matter particles exchanging messenger particles that carry the forces. These messenger particles are known as [[gluon]]s; [[W boson|W<sup>−</sup> and W<sup>+</sup>]] and [[Z boson]]s; and the [[photon]]s, respectively. The Standard Model also predicts a particle known as the [[Higgs boson|Higgs]] [[boson]], the existence of which has not yet been verified.


[[Molecular physics]] focuses on multi-atomic structures and their internal and external interactions with matter and light. [[Optical physics]] is distinct from optics in that it tends to focus not on the control of classical light fields by macroscopic objects but on the fundamental properties of [[optical field]]s and their interactions with matter in the microscopic realm.
====Astrophysics====
{{main|Astrophysics|Physical cosmology}}
[[Image:Hubble ultra deep field high rez edit1.jpg|thumb|250px|left|The deepest visible-light image of the [[universe]], the [[Hubble Ultra Deep Field]]]]


====Condensed matter====
[[Astrophysics]] and [[astronomy]] are the application of the theories and methods of physics to the study of [[stellar structure]], [[stellar evolution]], the origin of the [[solar system]], and related problems of [[Physical cosmology|cosmology]]. Because astrophysics is a broad subject, astrophysicists typically apply many disciplines of physics, including mechanics, electromagnetism, statistical mechanics, thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, relativity, nuclear and particle physics, and atomic and molecular physics.
{{Main|Condensed matter physics}}
[[File:Bose Einstein condensate.png|right|thumb|upright=1.25|Velocity-distribution data of a gas of [[rubidium]] atoms, confirming the discovery of a new phase of matter, the [[Bose–Einstein condensate]]]]


Condensed matter physics is the field of physics that deals with the macroscopic physical properties of matter.<ref name="taylorheinonen2002">{{harvnb|Taylor|Heinonen|2002}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Girvin|first1=Steven M.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2ESIDwAAQBAJ|title=Modern Condensed Matter Physics|last2=Yang|first2=Kun|date=28 February 2019|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-108-57347-4|language=en|access-date=23 August 2020|archive-date=25 February 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210225152053/https://books.google.com/books?id=2ESIDwAAQBAJ|url-status=live}}</ref> In particular, it is concerned with the "condensed" [[phase (matter)|phases]] that appear whenever the number of particles in a system is extremely large and the interactions between them are strong.<ref name=cohen2008>{{harvnb|Cohen|2008}}</ref>
The discovery by [[Karl Jansky]] in 1931 that radio signals were emitted by celestial bodies initiated the science of [[radio astronomy]]. Most recently, the frontiers of astronomy have been expanded by space exploration. Perturbations and interference from the earth’s atmosphere make space-based observations necessary for [[infrared astronomy|infrared]], [[ultraviolet astronomy|ultraviolet]], [[gamma-ray astronomy|gamma-ray]], and [[X-ray astronomy]].


The most familiar examples of condensed phases are [[Solid-state physics|solids]] and liquids, which arise from the bonding by way of the [[electromagnetic force]] between atoms.<ref name="moore2011">{{harvnb |Moore|2011|pp=255–258}}</ref> More exotic condensed phases include the [[superfluid]]<ref name="leggett1999">{{harvnb |Leggett|1999}}</ref> and the [[Bose–Einstein condensate]]<ref name="levy2001">{{harvnb |Levy|2001}}</ref> found in certain atomic systems at very low temperature, the [[superconductivity|superconducting]] phase exhibited by [[conduction electron]]s in certain materials,<ref name=stajiccoontzosborne2011>{{harvnb |Stajic|Coontz|Osborne|2011}}</ref> and the [[ferromagnet]]ic and [[antiferromagnet]]ic phases of [[Spin (physics)|spins]] on [[crystal lattice|atomic lattices]].<ref name="mattis2006">{{harvnb|Mattis|2006}}</ref>
[[Physical cosmology]] is the study of the formation and evolution of the universe on its largest scales. Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity plays a central role in all modern cosmological theories. In the early 20th century, [[Edwin Hubble|Hubble]]'s discovery that the universe was expanding, as shown by the [[Hubble diagram]], prompted rival explanations known as the [[steady state]] universe and the [[Big Bang]]. The Big Bang was confirmed by the success of [[Big Bang nucleosynthesis]] and the discovery of the [[cosmic microwave background]] in 1964. The Big Bang model rests on two theoretical pillars: Albert Einstein's general relativity and the [[cosmological principle]]. Cosmologists have recently established a [[Lambda-CDM model|precise model]] of the evolution of the universe, which includes [[cosmic inflation]], [[dark energy]] and [[dark matter]].


Condensed matter physics is the largest field of contemporary physics. Historically, condensed matter physics grew out of solid-state physics, which is now considered one of its main subfields.<ref name="aps-dcmp">{{cite web |url=http://www.aps.org/units/dcmp/history.cfm |title=History of Condensed Matter Physics |publisher=[[American Physical Society]] |access-date=31 March 2014 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110912081611/http://www.aps.org/units/dcmp/history.cfm |archive-date=12 September 2011 }}</ref> The term ''condensed matter physics'' was apparently coined by [[Philip Warren Anderson|Philip Anderson]] when he renamed his research group—previously ''solid-state theory''—in 1967.<ref name="princeton-anderson">{{cite web |title=Philip Anderson |url=http://www.princeton.edu/physics/people/display_person.xml?netid=pwa&display=faculty |publisher=Princeton University, Department of Physics |access-date=15 October 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111008123438/http://www.princeton.edu/physics/people/display_person.xml?netid=pwa&display=faculty |archive-date=8 October 2011 }}</ref> In 1978, the Division of Solid State Physics of the [[American Physical Society]] was renamed as the Division of Condensed Matter Physics.<ref name="aps-dcmp" /> Condensed matter physics has a large overlap with chemistry, [[materials science]], [[nanotechnology]] and engineering.<ref name="cohen2008" />
==Application and influence==
{{main|Applied physics}}
[[Image:IMG 1729 Gemaal met schroef van Archimedes bij Kinderdijk.JPG|thumb|right|[[Archimedes' screw]] uses [[simple machine]]s to lift [[water]].]]


====Astrophysics====
[[Applied physics]] is a general term for physics research which is intended for a particular [[Utility|use]]. An applied physics curriculum usually contains a few classes in an applied discipline, like geology or electrical engineering. It usually differs from [[engineering]] in that an applied physicist may not be designing something in particular, but rather is using physics or conducting physics research with the aim of developing new technologies or solving a problem. The approach is similar to that of [[applied mathematics]]. Applied physicists can also be interested in the use of physics for scientific research. For instance, people working on [[accelerator physics]] might seek to build better particle detectors for research in theoretical physics.
{{Main|Astrophysics|Physical cosmology}}
[[File:Hubble ultra deep field high rez edit1.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.5|The deepest visible-light image of the [[universe]], the [[Hubble Ultra-Deep Field]]. The vast majority of objects seen above are distant galaxies.]]


Astrophysics and astronomy are the application of the theories and methods of physics to the study of [[stellar structure]], [[stellar evolution]], the origin of the Solar System, and related problems of cosmology. Because astrophysics is a broad subject, astrophysicists typically apply many disciplines of physics, including mechanics, electromagnetism, statistical mechanics, thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, relativity, nuclear and particle physics, and atomic and molecular physics.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://manoa.hawaii.edu/astronomy/bs-in-astrophysics/ |title=BS in Astrophysics |publisher=University of Hawaii at Manoa |access-date=14 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160404195943/http://manoa.hawaii.edu/astronomy/bs-in-astrophysics/ |archive-date=4 April 2016 }}</ref>
Physics is used heavily in [[engineering]]. For example, [[Statics]], a subfield of [[mechanics]], is used in the building of [[bridge]]s and other structures. The understanding and use of [[acoustics]] results in better concert halls; similarly, the use of [[optics]] creates better optical devices. An understanding of physics makes for more realistic [[flight simulator]]s, video games, and movies, and is often critical in [[forensic]] investigations.


The discovery by [[Karl Jansky]] in 1931 that radio signals were emitted by celestial bodies initiated the science of [[radio astronomy]]. Most recently, the frontiers of astronomy have been expanded by space exploration. Perturbations and interference from the Earth's atmosphere make space-based observations necessary for [[infrared astronomy|infrared]], [[ultraviolet astronomy|ultraviolet]], [[gamma-ray astronomy|gamma-ray]], and [[X-ray astronomy]].
With the [[Uniformitarianism (science)|standard consensus]] that the [[Scientific law|laws]] of physics are universal and do not change with time, physics can be used to study things that would ordinarily be mired in [[uncertainty]]. For example, in the [[History of Earth#Origin|study of the origin of the Earth]], one can reasonably model Earth's [[mass]], [[temperature]], and rate of [[rotation]], over [[time]]. It also allows for simulations in engineering which drastically speed up the development of a new technology.


Physical cosmology is the study of the formation and evolution of the universe on its largest scales. Albert Einstein's theory of relativity plays a central role in all modern cosmological theories. In the early 20th century, [[Edwin Hubble|Hubble]]'s discovery that the universe is expanding, as shown by the [[Hubble diagram]], prompted rival explanations known as the [[steady-state model|steady state]] universe and the [[Big Bang]].
==Current research==
{{further|[[Unsolved problems in physics]]}}
[[Image:Feynman'sDiagram.JPG|thumb|right|[[Feynman diagram]] signed by [[R. P. Feynman]]]]


The Big Bang was confirmed by the success of [[Big Bang nucleosynthesis]] and the discovery of the [[cosmic microwave background]] in 1964. The Big Bang model rests on two theoretical pillars: Albert Einstein's general relativity and the [[cosmological principle]]. Cosmologists have recently established the [[Lambda-CDM model|ΛCDM model]] of the evolution of the universe, which includes [[cosmic inflation]], [[dark energy]], and [[dark matter]].
Research in physics is continually progressing on a large number of fronts.{{fact|date=April 2009}}


Numerous possibilities and discoveries are anticipated to emerge from new data from the [[Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope]] over the upcoming decade and vastly revise or clarify existing models of the universe.<ref name="nasa-glast">{{cite web |url=http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/main/questions_answers.html |title=NASA – Q&A on the GLAST Mission |access-date=29 April 2009 |website=Nasa: Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope |publisher=[[NASA]] |date=28 August 2008 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090425121001/http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/main/questions_answers.html |archive-date=25 April 2009 }}</ref><ref>See also [http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/science/index.html Nasa – Fermi Science] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100403041501/http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/science/index.html |date=3 April 2010 }} and [http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/science/unidentified_sources.html NASA – Scientists Predict Major Discoveries for GLAST] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090302071338/http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/science/unidentified_sources.html |date=2 March 2009 }}.</ref> In particular, the potential for a tremendous discovery surrounding dark matter is possible over the next several years.<ref name="nasa-glast-darkmatter">{{cite web |url=http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/science/dark_matter.html |title=Dark Matter |publisher=[[NASA]] |date=28 August 2008 |access-date=30 January 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120113060142/http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/science/dark_matter.html |archive-date=13 January 2012 }}</ref> Fermi will search for evidence that dark matter is composed of [[weakly interacting massive particles]], complementing similar experiments with the [[Large Hadron Collider]] and other underground detectors.
In condensed matter physics, an important unsolved theoretical problem is that of [[high-temperature superconductivity]]. Many condensed matter experiments are aiming to fabricate workable [[spintronics]] and [[quantum computer]]s.


[[IBEX]] is already yielding new [[astrophysical]] discoveries: "No one knows what is creating the [[energetic neutral atom|ENA (energetic neutral atoms)]] ribbon" along the [[termination shock]] of the [[solar wind]], "but everyone agrees that it means the textbook picture of the [[heliosphere]]—in which the Solar System's enveloping pocket filled with the solar wind's charged particles is plowing through the onrushing 'galactic wind' of the interstellar medium in the shape of a comet—is wrong."<ref name="kerr2009">{{harvnb|Kerr|2009}}</ref>
In particle physics, the first pieces of experimental evidence for physics beyond the [[Standard Model]] have begun to appear. Foremost among these are indications that [[neutrino]]s have non-zero [[mass]]. These experimental results appear to have solved the long-standing [[solar neutrino problem]], and the physics of massive neutrinos remains an area of active theoretical and experimental research. In the next several years, [[particle accelerator]]s will begin probing energy scales in the [[TeV]] range, in which experimentalists are hoping to find evidence<ref>
584 co-authors "Direct observation of the strange 'b' baryon <math>\Xi_{b}^{-}</math>" Fermilab-Pub-07/196-E, June 12, 2007
http://arxiv.org/abs/0706.1690v2 finds a mass of 5.774 GeV for the <math>\Xi_{b}^{-}</math>
</ref> for the [[Higgs boson]] and [[supersymmetry|supersymmetric particles]].


===Current research===
Theoretical attempts to unify [[quantum mechanics]] and [[general relativity]] into a single theory of [[quantum gravity]], a program ongoing for over half a century, have not yet been decisively resolved. The current leading candidates are [[M-theory]], [[superstring theory]] and [[loop quantum gravity]].
{{further|List of unsolved problems in physics}}
[[File:Feynman'sDiagram.JPG|thumb|right|[[Feynman diagram]] signed by [[R. P. Feynman]]]]
[[File:Meissner effect p1390048.jpg|thumb|right|A typical phenomenon described by physics: a [[magnet]] levitating above a [[superconductor]] demonstrates the [[Meissner effect]].]]


Research in physics is continually progressing on a large number of fronts.
Many [[astronomy|astronomical]] and [[physical cosmology|cosmological]] phenomena have yet to be satisfactorily explained, including the existence of [[GZK paradox|ultra-high energy cosmic rays]], the [[baryon asymmetry]], the [[accelerating universe|acceleration of the universe]] and the [[galaxy rotation problem|anomalous rotation rates of galaxies]].


In condensed matter physics, an important unsolved theoretical problem is that of [[high-temperature superconductivity]].<ref name="Legg2006">{{cite journal |last1=Leggett |first1=A. J. |year=2006 |title=What DO we know about high ''T''<sub>c</sub>? |url=http://leopard.physics.ucdavis.edu/rts/p242/nphys254.pdf |url-status=dead |journal=[[Nature Physics]] |volume=2 |issue=3 |pages=134–136 |bibcode=2006NatPh...2..134L |doi=10.1038/nphys254 |s2cid=122055331 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100610183622/http://leopard.physics.ucdavis.edu/rts/p242/nphys254.pdf |archive-date=10 June 2010}}</ref> Many condensed matter experiments are aiming to fabricate workable [[spintronics]] and [[quantum computer]]s.<ref name=cohen2008/><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Wolf |first1=S. A. |last2=Chtchelkanova |first2=A. Y. |last3=Treger |first3=D. M. |year=2006 |title=Spintronics&nbsp;– A retrospective and perspective |url=http://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/10b1/d4e488fabf429cb0630d96687548aa14158f.pdf |url-status=dead |journal=[[IBM Journal of Research and Development]] |volume=50 |pages=101–110 |doi=10.1147/rd.501.0101 |s2cid=41178069 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200924021923/http://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/10b1/d4e488fabf429cb0630d96687548aa14158f.pdf |archive-date=24 September 2020}}</ref>
Although much progress has been made in high-energy, [[quantum]], and astronomical physics, many everyday phenomena involving [[complex systems|complexity]], [[chaos]], or [[turbulence]] are still poorly understood. Complex problems that seem like they could be solved by a clever application of dynamics and mechanics remain unsolved; examples include the formation of sandpiles, nodes in trickling [[water]], the shape of water [[droplet]]s, mechanisms of [[surface tension]] [[catastrophe theory|catastrophes]], and self-sorting in shaken heterogeneous collections. These complex phenomena have received growing attention since the 1970s for several reasons, including the availability of modern [[mathematics|mathematical]] methods and [[computers]], which enabled [[complex systems]] to be modeled in new ways. Complex physics has become part of increasingly [[interdisciplinary]] research, as exemplified by the study of [[turbulence]] in [[aerodynamics]] and the observation of [[pattern formation]] in [[biology|biological]] systems. In 1932, [[Horace Lamb]] said:
{{cquote|I am an old man now, and when I die and go to heaven there are two matters on which I hope for enlightenment. One is quantum electrodynamics, and the other is the turbulent motion of fluids. And about the former I am rather optimistic.|30px|30px|[[Horace Lamb]]<ref>{{cite journal
| last=Goldstein | first=Sydney
| title=Fluid Mechanics in the First Half of this Century
| journal=Annual Reviews in Fluid Mechanics
| year=1969 | volume=1 | pages=1–28
| doi=10.1146/annurev.fl.01.010169.000245 }}</ref>}}


In particle physics, the first pieces of experimental evidence for physics beyond the Standard Model have begun to appear. Foremost among these are indications that [[neutrino]]s have non-zero [[mass]]. These experimental results appear to have solved the long-standing [[solar neutrino problem]], and the physics of massive neutrinos remains an area of active theoretical and experimental research. The Large Hadron Collider has already found the Higgs boson, but future research aims to prove or disprove the [[supersymmetry]], which extends the Standard Model of particle physics. Research on the nature of the major mysteries of dark matter and [[dark energy]] is also currently ongoing.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Gibney |first1=E. |year=2015 |title=LHC 2.0: A new view of the Universe |journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]] |volume=519 |issue=7542 |pages=142–143 |doi=10.1038/519142a |bibcode=2015Natur.519..142G |pmid=25762263 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
==See also==
{{portal|Physics|Stylised_Lithium_Atom.svg}}


Although much progress has been made in high-energy, [[quantum]], and astronomical physics, many everyday phenomena involving [[complex system|complexity]],<ref name="nrc1997v9p161">{{harvnb|National Research Council|Committee on Technology for Future Naval Forces|1997|p=161}}</ref> chaos,<ref name="kellert1993p32">{{harvnb|Kellert|1993|p=32}}</ref> or [[turbulence]]<ref name="eames-quoting-feynman">{{cite journal |last1=Eames |first1=I. |last2=Flor |first2=J. B. |year=2011 |title=New developments in understanding interfacial processes in turbulent flows |journal=[[Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A]] |volume=369 |issue=1937 |pages=702–705 |bibcode=2011RSPTA.369..702E |doi=10.1098/rsta.2010.0332 |pmid=21242127 |quote=Richard Feynman said that 'Turbulence is the most important unsolved problem of classical physics' |doi-access=free}}</ref> are still poorly understood. Complex problems that seem like they could be solved by a clever application of dynamics and mechanics remain unsolved; examples include the formation of sandpiles, nodes in trickling water, the shape of water droplets, mechanisms of [[surface tension]] [[catastrophe theory|catastrophes]], and self-sorting in shaken heterogeneous collections.{{efn |See the work of [[Ilya Prigogine]], on 'systems far from equilibrium', and others.}}<ref>{{Cite book |author1=National Research Council |chapter=What happens far from equilibrium and why |chapter-url= https://www.nap.edu/read/11967/chapter/7 |title=Condensed-Matter and Materials Physics: the science of the world around us |year=2007 |pages=91–110 |doi=10.17226/11967 |isbn=978-0-309-10969-7 |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20161104001321/https://www.nap.edu/read/11967/chapter/7 |archive-date=4 November 2016}}<br />– {{cite arXiv |last1=Jaeger |first1=Heinrich M. |last2=Liu |first2=Andrea J. |author2-link=Andrea Liu|year=2010 |title=Far-From-Equilibrium Physics: An Overview |class=cond-mat.soft |eprint=1009.4874}}</ref>
{{wiktionarypar|physics}}


These complex phenomena have received growing attention since the 1970s for several reasons, including the availability of modern mathematical methods and computers, which enabled [[complex systems]] to be modeled in new ways. Complex physics has become part of increasingly interdisciplinary research, as exemplified by the study of turbulence in aerodynamics and the observation of [[pattern formation]] in biological systems. In the 1932 ''Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics'', [[Horace Lamb]] said:<ref name="goldstein1969">{{harvnb|Goldstein|1969}}</ref>
;General
{{blockquote|I am an old man now, and when I die and go to heaven there are two matters on which I hope for enlightenment. One is quantum electrodynamics, and the other is the turbulent motion of fluids. And about the former I am rather optimistic.}}
* [[Classical physics]]
* [[Glossary of classical physics]]
* [[List of basic physics topics]]
* [[List of physics topics]]
* [[Perfection#Perfection in physics and chemistry|Perfection in physics and chemistry]]
* [[Philosophy of physics]]
* [[Physics (Aristotle)|''Physics'' (Aristotle)]] – an early book on physics, which attempted to analyze and define motion from a philosophical point of view
* [[Unsolved problems in physics]]


==Physics Education==
;Related fields
{{excerpt|Physics education}}
* [[Astronomy]]
* [[Chemistry]]
* [[Engineering]]
* [[Mathematics]]
* [[Science]]


==References==
==Careers==
{{excerpt|Physicist|paragraphs=1,2|files=no}}
{{reflist|2}}


==External links==
==See also==
{{wikibooks|Physics}}
{{Portal|Physics}}
* {{Annotated link|Earth science}}
{{wikibooks|Physics Study Guide}}
* {{Annotated link|Neurophysics}}
{{wikibooks|FHSST Physics}}
* {{Annotated link|Psychophysics}}
{{wikisourcepar|Category:Physics|Physics}}
* {{Annotated link|Relationship between mathematics and physics}}
{{wikiversity|Category:Physics|Physics}}
* {{Annotated link|Science tourism}}
* A large number of textbooks, popular books, and webpages about physics are available for [[Physics (further reading)|further reading]].
* [[List of important publications in physics|Important publications in physics]]


=== Lists ===
;General
* {{Annotated link|List of important publications in physics}}
<!-- Please do not post more links here, they will be taken down as link spam!! -->
* {{Annotated link|List of physicists}}
* [http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/Hbase/hframe.html HyperPhysics website] – [[HyperPhysics]], a physics and astronomy mind-map from [[Georgia State University]]
* {{Annotated link|Lists of physics equations}}
* [http://www.physicstoday.org Physics Today] – Your daily physics news and research source
* [http://www.physics.org/ Physics.org] – Web portal run by the [http://www.iop.org/ Institute of Physics]
* [http://musr.physics.ubc.ca/~jess/hr/skept/ ''The Skeptic's Guide to Physics'']
* [http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/ Usenet Physics FAQ] – A FAQ compiled by sci.physics and other physics newsgroups
* [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/ Website of the Nobel Prize in physics]
* [http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/ World of Physics] – An online encyclopedic dictionary of physics


==Notes==
;Organizations
{{notelist|30em}}
* [http://www.aip.org/index.html AIP.org] – Website of the [[American Institute of Physics]]
* [http://www.aps.org APS.org] – Website of the [[American Physical Society]]
* [http://www.iop.org IOP.org] – Website of the [[Institute of Physics]]
* [http://www.physicsmathforums.com Physics & Math Forums]
* [http://www.royalsoc.ac.uk Royal Society] – Although not exclusively a physics institution, it has a strong history of physics
* [http://www.spsnational.org SPS National] – Website of the [[Society of Physics Students]]


==References==
{{FundamentalForces}}
{{Physics-footer}}
{{Reflist}}
{{Natural sciences-footer}}


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|url=http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/HistTopics/The_Quantum_age_begins.html
|access-date=1 April 2014
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Oerter
|first=R.
|title=The Theory of Almost Everything: The Standard Model, the Unsung Triumph of Modern Physics
|url=https://archive.org/details/theoryofalmostev0000oert
|url-access=registration
|year=2006
|publisher=Pi Press
|isbn=978-0-13-236678-6
}}
* {{cite book
|last1=Penrose
|first1=R.
|author1-link=Roger Penrose
|last2=Shimony
|first2=A.
|last3=Cartwright
|first3=N.
|last4=Hawking
|first4=S.
|author4-link=Stephen Hawking
|title=The Large, the Small and the Human Mind
|publisher=Cambridge University Press
|year=1997
|isbn=978-0-521-78572-3
|title-link=The Large, the Small and the Human Mind
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Penrose
|first=R.
|author-link=Roger Penrose
|title=The Road to Reality
|year=2004
|isbn=978-0-679-45443-4
|title-link=The Road to Reality
|publisher=A.A. Knopf
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Rosenberg
|first=Alex
|title=Philosophy of Science
|publisher=Routledge
|year=2006
|isbn=978-0-415-34317-6
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Schrödinger
|first=E.
|title=My View of the World
|publisher=Ox Bow Press
|year=1983
|isbn=978-0-918024-30-5
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Schrödinger
|first=E.
|title=The Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics
|publisher=Ox Bow Press
|year=1995
|isbn=978-1-881987-09-3
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Singer
|first=C.
|title=A Short History of Science to the 19th Century
|publisher=Streeter Press
|year=2008
}}
* {{cite book |last= Smith |first= A. Mark |title=Alhacen's Theory of Visual Perception: A Critical Edition, with English Translation and Commentary, of the First Three Books of Alhacen's ''De Aspectibus'', the Medieval Latin Version of Ibn al-Haytham's ''Kitāb al-Manāẓir'', 2 vols |series=Transactions of the American Philosophical Society |volume=91 |issue=4–5 |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-87169-914-5 |publisher=[[American Philosophical Society]] |location=[[Philadelphia]] |oclc=47168716 |title-link= De Aspectibus }}
** {{cite journal |ref=none |jstor=3657358|title=Alhacen's Theory of Visual Perception: A Critical Edition, with English Translation and Commentary, of the First Three Books of Alhacen's "De aspectibus", the Medieval Latin Version of Ibn al-Haytham's "Kitāb al-Manāẓir": Volume One |last1=Smith |first1=A. Mark |journal=Transactions of the American Philosophical Society |volume=91 |issue=4 |pages=i–clxxxi, 1–337 |year=2001a |doi=10.2307/3657358}}
** {{cite journal |ref=none |jstor=3657357|title=Alhacen's Theory of Visual Perception: A Critical Edition, with English Translation and Commentary, of the First Three Books of Alhacen's "De aspectibus", the Medieval Latin Version of Ibn al-Haytham's "Kitāb al-Manāẓir": Volume Two |last1=Smith |first1=A. Mark |journal=Transactions of the American Philosophical Society |volume=91 |issue=5 |pages=339–819 |year=2001b |doi=10.2307/3657357}}
* {{cite journal
|last1=Stajic
|first1=Jelena
|last2=Coontz
|first2=R.
|last3=Osborne
|first3=I.
|title=Happy 100th, Superconductivity!
|journal=Science
|date=8 April 2011
|volume=332
|issue=6026
|page=189
|doi=10.1126/science.332.6026.189
|bibcode = 2011Sci...332..189S
|pmid=21474747|doi-access=free
}}
* {{cite book
|last1=Taylor
|first1=P.L.
|last2=Heinonen
|first2=O.
|title=A Quantum Approach to Condensed Matter Physics
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hyx6BjEX4U8C
|year=2002
|publisher=Cambridge University Press
|isbn=978-0-521-77827-5
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Thurston
|first=H.
|title=Early Astronomy
|year=1994
|publisher=Springer
}}
* {{cite book
|last1=Tipler
|first1=Paul
|last2=Llewellyn
|first2=Ralph
|title=Modern Physics
|year=2003
|publisher=W. H. Freeman
|isbn=978-0-7167-4345-3
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Toraldo Di Francia
|first=G.
|title=The Investigation of the Physical World
|year=1976
|publisher=CUP Archive
|isbn=978-0-521-29925-1
}}
* {{cite web
|last=Walsh
|first=K.M.
|title=Plotting the Future for Computing in High-Energy and Nuclear Physics
|url=http://www.bnl.gov/newsroom/news.php?a=23098
|publisher=[[Brookhaven National Laboratory]]
|access-date=18 October 2012
|date=1 June 2012
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160729020032/https://www.bnl.gov/newsroom/news.php?a=23098
|archive-date=29 July 2016
}}
* {{cite book
|last1=Young
|first1=H.D.
|last2=Freedman
|first2=R.A.
|year=2014
|edition=13th
|title=Sears and Zemansky's University Physics with Modern Physics Technology Update
|publisher=Pearson Education
|isbn=978-1-292-02063-1
|title-link=University Physics
}}
{{Refend}}


==External links==
[[Category:Natural sciences|Physics]]
{{Sister project links}}
[[Category:Physical sciences| ]]
* [https://quantamagazine.org/physics Physics at Quanta Magazine]
[[Category:Physics| ]]
* [http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/ Usenet Physics FAQ] – FAQ compiled by sci.physics and other physics newsgroups
[[Category:Introductory physics| ]]
* [https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/physics/ Website of the Nobel Prize in physics] – Award for outstanding contributions to the subject
[[Category:Fundamental physics concepts|Physics]]
* [http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/ World of Physics] – Online encyclopedic dictionary of physics
* [https://www.nature.com/nphys/ ''Nature Physics''] – Academic journal
* [http://physics.aps.org/ Physics] – Online magazine by the [[American Physical Society]]
– Directory of physics related media
* [http://www.vega.org.uk/ The Vega Science Trust] – Science videos, including physics
* [http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/Hbase/hframe.html HyperPhysics website] – Physics and astronomy mind-map from [[Georgia State University]]
* [https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/physics/ Physics at MIT OpenCourseWare] – Online course material from [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]]
* [https://feynmanlectures.caltech.edu The Feynman Lectures on Physics]


{{Fundamental interactions}}
{{Link FA|id}}
{{Branches of physics}}
{{Natural science}}


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Latest revision as of 14:57, 22 November 2024

Physics is the scientific study of matter, its fundamental constituents, its motion and behavior through space and time, and the related entities of energy and force.[1] Physics is one of the most fundamental scientific disciplines.[2][3][4] A scientist who specializes in the field of physics is called a physicist.

Physics is one of the oldest academic disciplines.[5] Over much of the past two millennia, physics, chemistry, biology, and certain branches of mathematics were a part of natural philosophy, but during the Scientific Revolution in the 17th century, these natural sciences branched into separate research endeavors.[a] Physics intersects with many interdisciplinary areas of research, such as biophysics and quantum chemistry, and the boundaries of physics are not rigidly defined. New ideas in physics often explain the fundamental mechanisms studied by other sciences[2] and suggest new avenues of research in these and other academic disciplines such as mathematics and philosophy.

Advances in physics often enable new technologies. For example, advances in the understanding of electromagnetism, solid-state physics, and nuclear physics led directly to the development of technologies that have transformed modern society, such as television, computers, domestic appliances, and nuclear weapons;[2] advances in thermodynamics led to the development of industrialization; and advances in mechanics inspired the development of calculus.

The expansion of the universe according to the Big Bang theory in physics

History

The word physics comes from the Latin physica ('study of nature'), which itself is a borrowing of the Greek φυσική (phusikḗ 'natural science'), a term derived from φύσις (phúsis 'origin, nature, property').[7][8][9]

Ancient astronomy

Ancient Egyptian astronomy is evident in monuments like the ceiling of Senemut's tomb from the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt.

Astronomy is one of the oldest natural sciences. Early civilizations dating before 3000 BCE, such as the Sumerians, ancient Egyptians, and the Indus Valley Civilisation, had a predictive knowledge and a basic awareness of the motions of the Sun, Moon, and stars. The stars and planets, believed to represent gods, were often worshipped. While the explanations for the observed positions of the stars were often unscientific and lacking in evidence, these early observations laid the foundation for later astronomy, as the stars were found to traverse great circles across the sky,[5] which could not explain the positions of the planets.

According to Asger Aaboe, the origins of Western astronomy can be found in Mesopotamia, and all Western efforts in the exact sciences are descended from late Babylonian astronomy.[10] Egyptian astronomers left monuments showing knowledge of the constellations and the motions of the celestial bodies,[11] while Greek poet Homer wrote of various celestial objects in his Iliad and Odyssey; later Greek astronomers provided names, which are still used today, for most constellations visible from the Northern Hemisphere.[12]

Natural philosophy

Natural philosophy has its origins in Greece during the Archaic period (650 BCE – 480 BCE), when pre-Socratic philosophers like Thales rejected non-naturalistic explanations for natural phenomena and proclaimed that every event had a natural cause.[13] They proposed ideas verified by reason and observation, and many of their hypotheses proved successful in experiment;[14] for example, atomism was found to be correct approximately 2000 years after it was proposed by Leucippus and his pupil Democritus.[15]

Aristotle and Hellenistic physics

Aristotle
(384–322 BCE)

During the classical period in Greece (6th, 5th and 4th centuries BCE) and in Hellenistic times, natural philosophy developed along many lines of inquiry. Aristotle (Greek: Ἀριστοτέλης, Aristotélēs) (384–322 BCE), a student of Plato, wrote on many subjects, including a substantial treatise on "Physics" – in the 4th century BC. Aristotelian physics was influential for about two millennia. His approach mixed some limited observation with logical deductive arguments, but did not rely on experimental verification of deduced statements. Aristotle's foundational work in Physics, though very imperfect, formed a framework against which later thinkers further developed the field. His approach is entirely superseded today.

He explained ideas such as motion (and gravity) with the theory of four elements. Aristotle believed that each of the four classical elements (air, fire, water, earth) had its own natural place.[16] Because of their differing densities, each element will revert to its own specific place in the atmosphere.[17] So, because of their weights, fire would be at the top, air underneath fire, then water, then lastly earth. He also stated that when a small amount of one element enters the natural place of another, the less abundant element will automatically go towards its own natural place. For example, if there is a fire on the ground, the flames go up into the air in an attempt to go back into its natural place where it belongs. His laws of motion included: that heavier objects will fall faster, the speed being proportional to the weight and the speed of the object that is falling depends inversely on the density object it is falling through (e.g. density of air).[18] He also stated that, when it comes to violent motion (motion of an object when a force is applied to it by a second object) that the speed that object moves, will only be as fast or strong as the measure of force applied to it.[18] The problem of motion and its causes was studied carefully, leading to the philosophical notion of a "prime mover" as the ultimate source of all motion in the world (Book 8 of his treatise Physics).

Medieval European and Islamic

The Western Roman Empire fell to invaders and internal decay in the fifth century, resulting in a decline in intellectual pursuits in western Europe. By contrast, the Eastern Roman Empire (usually known as the Byzantine Empire) resisted the attacks from invaders and continued to advance various fields of learning, including physics.[19]

In the sixth century, Isidore of Miletus created an important compilation of Archimedes' works that are copied in the Archimedes Palimpsest.

In sixth-century Europe John Philoponus, a Byzantine scholar, questioned Aristotle's teaching of physics and noted its flaws. He introduced the theory of impetus. Aristotle's physics was not scrutinized until Philoponus appeared; unlike Aristotle, who based his physics on verbal argument, Philoponus relied on observation. On Aristotle's physics Philoponus wrote:

But this is completely erroneous, and our view may be corroborated by actual observation more effectively than by any sort of verbal argument. For if you let fall from the same height two weights of which one is many times as heavy as the other, you will see that the ratio of the times required for the motion does not depend on the ratio of the weights, but that the difference in time is a very small one. And so, if the difference in the weights is not considerable, that is, of one is, let us say, double the other, there will be no difference, or else an imperceptible difference, in time, though the difference in weight is by no means negligible, with one body weighing twice as much as the other[20]

Philoponus' criticism of Aristotelian principles of physics served as an inspiration for Galileo Galilei ten centuries later,[21] during the Scientific Revolution. Galileo cited Philoponus substantially in his works when arguing that Aristotelian physics was flawed.[22][23] In the 1300s Jean Buridan, a teacher in the faculty of arts at the University of Paris, developed the concept of impetus. It was a step toward the modern ideas of inertia and momentum.[24]

Islamic scholarship inherited Aristotelian physics from the Greeks and during the Islamic Golden Age developed it further, especially placing emphasis on observation and a priori reasoning, developing early forms of the scientific method.

Ibn Al-Haytham (Alhazen) drawing
Ibn al-Haytham (c. 965 – c. 1040) wrote of his camera obscura experiments in the Book of Optics.[25]

The most notable innovations under Islamic scholarship were in the field of optics and vision,[26] which came from the works of many scientists like Ibn Sahl, Al-Kindi, Ibn al-Haytham, Al-Farisi and Avicenna. The most notable work was The Book of Optics (also known as Kitāb al-Manāẓir), written by Ibn al-Haytham, in which he presented the alternative to the ancient Greek idea about vision.[27] In his Treatise on Light as well as in his Kitāb al-Manāẓir, he presented a study of the phenomenon of the camera obscura (his thousand-year-old version of the pinhole camera) and delved further into the way the eye itself works. Using the knowledge of previous scholars, he began to explain how light enters the eye. He asserted that the light ray is focused, but the actual explanation of how light projected to the back of the eye had to wait until 1604. His Treatise on Light explained the camera obscura, hundreds of years before the modern development of photography.[28]

The basic way a pinhole camera works

The seven-volume Book of Optics (Kitab al-Manathir) influenced thinking[29] across disciplines from the theory of visual perception to the nature of perspective in medieval art, in both the East and the West, for more than 600 years. This included later European scholars and fellow polymaths, from Robert Grosseteste and Leonardo da Vinci to Johannes Kepler.

The translation of The Book of Optics had an impact on Europe. From it, later European scholars were able to build devices that replicated those Ibn al-Haytham had built and understand the way vision works.

Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) related mathematics, theoretical physics, and experimental physics.

Classical

Isaac Newton discovered the laws of motion and universal gravitation

Physics became a separate science when early modern Europeans used experimental and quantitative methods to discover what are now considered to be the laws of physics.[30][page needed]

Major developments in this period include the replacement of the geocentric model of the Solar System with the heliocentric Copernican model, the laws governing the motion of planetary bodies (determined by Kepler between 1609 and 1619), Galileo's pioneering work on telescopes and observational astronomy in the 16th and 17th centuries, and Isaac Newton's discovery and unification of the laws of motion and universal gravitation (that would come to bear his name).[31] Newton also developed calculus,[b] the mathematical study of continuous change, which provided new mathematical methods for solving physical problems.[32]

The discovery of laws in thermodynamics, chemistry, and electromagnetics resulted from research efforts during the Industrial Revolution as energy needs increased.[33] The laws comprising classical physics remain widely used for objects on everyday scales travelling at non-relativistic speeds, since they provide a close approximation in such situations, and theories such as quantum mechanics and the theory of relativity simplify to their classical equivalents at such scales. Inaccuracies in classical mechanics for very small objects and very high velocities led to the development of modern physics in the 20th century.

Modern

Max Planck (1858–1947), the originator of the theory of quantum mechanics
Albert Einstein (1879–1955), discovered the photoelectric effect and theory of relativity.

Modern physics began in the early 20th century with the work of Max Planck in quantum theory and Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. Both of these theories came about due to inaccuracies in classical mechanics in certain situations. Classical mechanics predicted that the speed of light depends on the motion of the observer, which could not be resolved with the constant speed predicted by Maxwell's equations of electromagnetism. This discrepancy was corrected by Einstein's theory of special relativity, which replaced classical mechanics for fast-moving bodies and allowed for a constant speed of light.[34] Black-body radiation provided another problem for classical physics, which was corrected when Planck proposed that the excitation of material oscillators is possible only in discrete steps proportional to their frequency. This, along with the photoelectric effect and a complete theory predicting discrete energy levels of electron orbitals, led to the theory of quantum mechanics improving on classical physics at very small scales.[35]

Quantum mechanics would come to be pioneered by Werner Heisenberg, Erwin Schrödinger and Paul Dirac.[35] From this early work, and work in related fields, the Standard Model of particle physics was derived.[36] Following the discovery of a particle with properties consistent with the Higgs boson at CERN in 2012,[37] all fundamental particles predicted by the standard model, and no others, appear to exist; however, physics beyond the Standard Model, with theories such as supersymmetry, is an active area of research.[38] Areas of mathematics in general are important to this field, such as the study of probabilities and groups.

Core theories

Physics deals with a wide variety of systems, although certain theories are used by all physicists. Each of these theories was experimentally tested numerous times and found to be an adequate approximation of nature. For instance, the theory of classical mechanics accurately describes the motion of objects, provided they are much larger than atoms and moving at a speed much less than the speed of light. These theories continue to be areas of active research today. Chaos theory, an aspect of classical mechanics, was discovered in the 20th century, three centuries after the original formulation of classical mechanics by Newton (1642–1727).

These central theories are important tools for research into more specialized topics, and any physicist, regardless of their specialization, is expected to be literate in them. These include classical mechanics, quantum mechanics, thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, electromagnetism, and special relativity.

Classical theory

Classical physics includes the traditional branches and topics that were recognized and well-developed before the beginning of the 20th century—classical mechanics, acoustics, optics, thermodynamics, and electromagnetism. Classical mechanics is concerned with bodies acted on by forces and bodies in motion and may be divided into statics (study of the forces on a body or bodies not subject to an acceleration), kinematics (study of motion without regard to its causes), and dynamics (study of motion and the forces that affect it); mechanics may also be divided into solid mechanics and fluid mechanics (known together as continuum mechanics), the latter include such branches as hydrostatics, hydrodynamics and pneumatics. Acoustics is the study of how sound is produced, controlled, transmitted and received.[39] Important modern branches of acoustics include ultrasonics, the study of sound waves of very high frequency beyond the range of human hearing; bioacoustics, the physics of animal calls and hearing,[40] and electroacoustics, the manipulation of audible sound waves using electronics.[41]

Optics, the study of light, is concerned not only with visible light but also with infrared and ultraviolet radiation, which exhibit all of the phenomena of visible light except visibility, e.g., reflection, refraction, interference, diffraction, dispersion, and polarization of light. Heat is a form of energy, the internal energy possessed by the particles of which a substance is composed; thermodynamics deals with the relationships between heat and other forms of energy. Electricity and magnetism have been studied as a single branch of physics since the intimate connection between them was discovered in the early 19th century; an electric current gives rise to a magnetic field, and a changing magnetic field induces an electric current. Electrostatics deals with electric charges at rest, electrodynamics with moving charges, and magnetostatics with magnetic poles at rest.

Modern theory

Classical physics is generally concerned with matter and energy on the normal scale of observation, while much of modern physics is concerned with the behavior of matter and energy under extreme conditions or on a very large or very small scale. For example, atomic and nuclear physics study matter on the smallest scale at which chemical elements can be identified. The physics of elementary particles is on an even smaller scale since it is concerned with the most basic units of matter; this branch of physics is also known as high-energy physics because of the extremely high energies necessary to produce many types of particles in particle accelerators. On this scale, ordinary, commonsensical notions of space, time, matter, and energy are no longer valid.[42]

The two chief theories of modern physics present a different picture of the concepts of space, time, and matter from that presented by classical physics. Classical mechanics approximates nature as continuous, while quantum theory is concerned with the discrete nature of many phenomena at the atomic and subatomic level and with the complementary aspects of particles and waves in the description of such phenomena. The theory of relativity is concerned with the description of phenomena that take place in a frame of reference that is in motion with respect to an observer; the special theory of relativity is concerned with motion in the absence of gravitational fields and the general theory of relativity with motion and its connection with gravitation. Both quantum theory and the theory of relativity find applications in many areas of modern physics.[43]

Fundamental concepts in modern physics

Distinction between classical and modern physics

The basic domains of physics

While physics itself aims to discover universal laws, its theories lie in explicit domains of applicability.

Solvay Conference of 1927, with prominent physicists such as Albert Einstein, Werner Heisenberg, Max Planck, Hendrik Lorentz, Niels Bohr, Marie Curie, Erwin Schrödinger and Paul Dirac

Loosely speaking, the laws of classical physics accurately describe systems whose important length scales are greater than the atomic scale and whose motions are much slower than the speed of light. Outside of this domain, observations do not match predictions provided by classical mechanics. Einstein contributed the framework of special relativity, which replaced notions of absolute time and space with spacetime and allowed an accurate description of systems whose components have speeds approaching the speed of light. Planck, Schrödinger, and others introduced quantum mechanics, a probabilistic notion of particles and interactions that allowed an accurate description of atomic and subatomic scales. Later, quantum field theory unified quantum mechanics and special relativity. General relativity allowed for a dynamical, curved spacetime, with which highly massive systems and the large-scale structure of the universe can be well-described. General relativity has not yet been unified with the other fundamental descriptions; several candidate theories of quantum gravity are being developed.

Philosophy and relation to other fields

Physics, as with the rest of science, relies on the philosophy of science and its "scientific method" to advance knowledge of the physical world.[44] The scientific method employs a priori and a posteriori reasoning as well as the use of Bayesian inference to measure the validity of a given theory.[45] Study of the philosophical issues surrounding physics, the philosophy of physics, involves issues such as the nature of space and time, determinism, and metaphysical outlooks such as empiricism, naturalism, and realism.[46]

Many physicists have written about the philosophical implications of their work, for instance Laplace, who championed causal determinism,[47] and Erwin Schrödinger, who wrote on quantum mechanics.[48][49] The mathematical physicist Roger Penrose has been called a Platonist by Stephen Hawking,[50] a view Penrose discusses in his book, The Road to Reality.[51] Hawking referred to himself as an "unashamed reductionist" and took issue with Penrose's views.[52]

This parabola-shaped lava flow illustrates an application of mathematics in physics — in this case, Galileo's law of falling bodies.
Mathematics and ontology are used in physics. Physics is used in chemistry and cosmology.

Mathematics provides a compact and exact language used to describe the order in nature. This was noted and advocated by Pythagoras,[53] Plato,[54] Galileo,[55] and Newton. Some theorists, like Hilary Putnam and Penelope Maddy, hold that logical truths, and therefore mathematical reasoning, depend on the empirical world. This is usually combined with the claim that the laws of logic express universal regularities found in the structural features of the world, which may explain the peculiar relation between these fields.

Physics uses mathematics[56] to organise and formulate experimental results. From those results, precise or estimated solutions are obtained, or quantitative results, from which new predictions can be made and experimentally confirmed or negated. The results from physics experiments are numerical data, with their units of measure and estimates of the errors in the measurements. Technologies based on mathematics, like computation have made computational physics an active area of research.

The distinction between mathematics and physics is clear-cut, but not always obvious, especially in mathematical physics.

Ontology is a prerequisite for physics, but not for mathematics. It means physics is ultimately concerned with descriptions of the real world, while mathematics is concerned with abstract patterns, even beyond the real world. Thus physics statements are synthetic, while mathematical statements are analytic. Mathematics contains hypotheses, while physics contains theories. Mathematics statements have to be only logically true, while predictions of physics statements must match observed and experimental data.

The distinction is clear-cut, but not always obvious. For example, mathematical physics is the application of mathematics in physics. Its methods are mathematical, but its subject is physical.[57] The problems in this field start with a "mathematical model of a physical situation" (system) and a "mathematical description of a physical law" that will be applied to that system. Every mathematical statement used for solving has a hard-to-find physical meaning. The final mathematical solution has an easier-to-find meaning, because it is what the solver is looking for.[clarification needed]

Distinction between fundamental vs. applied physics

Physics is a branch of fundamental science (also called basic science). Physics is also called "the fundamental science" because all branches of natural science including chemistry, astronomy, geology, and biology are constrained by laws of physics.[58] Similarly, chemistry is often called the central science because of its role in linking the physical sciences. For example, chemistry studies properties, structures, and reactions of matter (chemistry's focus on the molecular and atomic scale distinguishes it from physics). Structures are formed because particles exert electrical forces on each other, properties include physical characteristics of given substances, and reactions are bound by laws of physics, like conservation of energy, mass, and charge. Fundamental physics seeks to better explain and understand phenomena in all spheres, without a specific practical application as a goal, other than the deeper insight into the phenomema themselves.

An acoustic engineering model of sound reflecting from an acoustic diffuser, implemented with classical physics
Archimedes' screw, a simple machine for lifting

Applied physics is a general term for physics research and development that is intended for a particular use. An applied physics curriculum usually contains a few classes in an applied discipline, like geology or electrical engineering. It usually differs from engineering in that an applied physicist may not be designing something in particular, but rather is using physics or conducting physics research with the aim of developing new technologies or solving a problem.

The approach is similar to that of applied mathematics. Applied physicists use physics in scientific research. For instance, people working on accelerator physics might seek to build better particle detectors for research in theoretical physics.

Physics is used heavily in engineering. For example, statics, a subfield of mechanics, is used in the building of bridges and other static structures. The understanding and use of acoustics results in sound control and better concert halls; similarly, the use of optics creates better optical devices. An understanding of physics makes for more realistic flight simulators, video games, and movies, and is often critical in forensic investigations.

Experiment using a laser

With the standard consensus that the laws of physics are universal and do not change with time, physics can be used to study things that would ordinarily be mired in uncertainty. For example, in the study of the origin of the Earth, a physicist can reasonably model Earth's mass, temperature, and rate of rotation, as a function of time allowing the extrapolation forward or backward in time and so predict future or prior events. It also allows for simulations in engineering that speed up the development of a new technology.

There is also considerable interdisciplinarity, so many other important fields are influenced by physics (e.g., the fields of econophysics and sociophysics).

Research

Scientific method

Physicists use the scientific method to test the validity of a physical theory. By using a methodical approach to compare the implications of a theory with the conclusions drawn from its related experiments and observations, physicists are better able to test the validity of a theory in a logical, unbiased, and repeatable way. To that end, experiments are performed and observations are made in order to determine the validity or invalidity of a theory.[59]

A scientific law is a concise verbal or mathematical statement of a relation that expresses a fundamental principle of some theory, such as Newton's law of universal gravitation.[60]

Theory and experiment

The astronaut and Earth are both in free fall. (Pictured: Astronaut Bruce McCandless.)
Lightning is an electric current.

Theorists seek to develop mathematical models that both agree with existing experiments and successfully predict future experimental results, while experimentalists devise and perform experiments to test theoretical predictions and explore new phenomena. Although theory and experiment are developed separately, they strongly affect and depend upon each other. Progress in physics frequently comes about when experimental results defy explanation by existing theories, prompting intense focus on applicable modelling, and when new theories generate experimentally testable predictions, which inspire the development of new experiments (and often related equipment).[61]

Physicists who work at the interplay of theory and experiment are called phenomenologists, who study complex phenomena observed in experiment and work to relate them to a fundamental theory.[62]

Theoretical physics has historically taken inspiration from philosophy; electromagnetism was unified this way.[c] Beyond the known universe, the field of theoretical physics also deals with hypothetical issues,[d] such as parallel universes, a multiverse, and higher dimensions. Theorists invoke these ideas in hopes of solving particular problems with existing theories; they then explore the consequences of these ideas and work toward making testable predictions.

Experimental physics expands, and is expanded by, engineering and technology. Experimental physicists who are involved in basic research design and perform experiments with equipment such as particle accelerators and lasers, whereas those involved in applied research often work in industry, developing technologies such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and transistors. Feynman has noted that experimentalists may seek areas that have not been explored well by theorists.[63]

Scope and aims

Physics involves modeling the natural world with theory, usually quantitative. Here, the path of a particle is modeled with the mathematics of calculus to explain its behavior: the purview of the branch of physics known as mechanics.

Physics covers a wide range of phenomena, from elementary particles (such as quarks, neutrinos, and electrons) to the largest superclusters of galaxies. Included in these phenomena are the most basic objects composing all other things. Therefore, physics is sometimes called the "fundamental science".[58] Physics aims to describe the various phenomena that occur in nature in terms of simpler phenomena. Thus, physics aims to both connect the things observable to humans to root causes, and then connect these causes together.

For example, the ancient Chinese observed that certain rocks (lodestone and magnetite) were attracted to one another by an invisible force. This effect was later called magnetism, which was first rigorously studied in the 17th century. But even before the Chinese discovered magnetism, the ancient Greeks knew of other objects such as amber, that when rubbed with fur would cause a similar invisible attraction between the two.[64] This was also first studied rigorously in the 17th century and came to be called electricity. Thus, physics had come to understand two observations of nature in terms of some root cause (electricity and magnetism). However, further work in the 19th century revealed that these two forces were just two different aspects of one force—electromagnetism. This process of "unifying" forces continues today, and electromagnetism and the weak nuclear force are now considered to be two aspects of the electroweak interaction. Physics hopes to find an ultimate reason (theory of everything) for why nature is as it is (see section Current research below for more information).[65]

Research fields

Contemporary research in physics can be broadly divided into nuclear and particle physics; condensed matter physics; atomic, molecular, and optical physics; astrophysics; and applied physics. Some physics departments also support physics education research and physics outreach.[66]

Since the 20th century, the individual fields of physics have become increasingly specialised, and today most physicists work in a single field for their entire careers. "Universalists" such as Einstein (1879–1955) and Lev Landau (1908–1968), who worked in multiple fields of physics, are now very rare.[e]

The major fields of physics, along with their subfields and the theories and concepts they employ, are shown in the following table.

Field Subfields Major theories Concepts
Nuclear and particle physics Nuclear physics, Nuclear astrophysics, Particle physics, Astroparticle physics, Particle physics phenomenology Standard Model, Quantum field theory, Quantum electrodynamics, Quantum chromodynamics, Electroweak theory, Effective field theory, Lattice field theory, Gauge theory, Supersymmetry, Grand Unified Theory, Superstring theory, M-theory, AdS/CFT correspondence Fundamental interaction (gravitational, electromagnetic, weak, strong), Elementary particle, Spin, Antimatter, Spontaneous symmetry breaking, Neutrino oscillation, Seesaw mechanism, Brane, String, Quantum gravity, Theory of everything, Vacuum energy
Atomic, molecular, and optical physics Atomic physics, Molecular physics, Atomic and molecular astrophysics, Chemical physics, Optics, Photonics Quantum optics, Quantum chemistry, Quantum information science Photon, Atom, Molecule, Diffraction, Electromagnetic radiation, Laser, Polarization (waves), Spectral line, Casimir effect
Condensed matter physics Solid-state physics, High-pressure physics, Low-temperature physics, Surface physics, Nanoscale and mesoscopic physics, Polymer physics BCS theory, Bloch's theorem, Density functional theory, Fermi gas, Fermi liquid theory, Many-body theory, Statistical mechanics Phases (gas, liquid, solid), Bose–Einstein condensate, Electrical conduction, Phonon, Magnetism, Self-organization, Semiconductor, superconductor, superfluidity, Spin
Astrophysics Astronomy, Astrometry, Cosmology, Gravitation physics, High-energy astrophysics, Planetary astrophysics, Plasma physics, Solar physics, Space physics, Stellar astrophysics Big Bang, Cosmic inflation, General relativity, Newton's law of universal gravitation, Lambda-CDM model, Magnetohydrodynamics Black hole, Cosmic background radiation, Cosmic string, Cosmos, Dark energy, Dark matter, Galaxy, Gravity, Gravitational radiation, Gravitational singularity, Planet, Solar System, Star, Supernova, Universe
Applied physics Accelerator physics, Acoustics, Agrophysics, Atmospheric physics, Biophysics, Chemical physics, Communication physics, Econophysics, Engineering physics, Fluid dynamics, Geophysics, Laser physics, Materials physics, Medical physics, Nanotechnology, Optics, Optoelectronics, Photonics, Photovoltaics, Physical chemistry, Physical oceanography, Physics of computation, Plasma physics, Solid-state devices, Quantum chemistry, Quantum electronics, Quantum information science, Vehicle dynamics

Nuclear and particle

A simulated event in the CMS detector of the Large Hadron Collider, featuring a possible appearance of the Higgs boson

Particle physics is the study of the elementary constituents of matter and energy and the interactions between them.[67] In addition, particle physicists design and develop the high-energy accelerators,[68] detectors,[69] and computer programs[70] necessary for this research. The field is also called "high-energy physics" because many elementary particles do not occur naturally but are created only during high-energy collisions of other particles.[71]

Currently, the interactions of elementary particles and fields are described by the Standard Model.[72] The model accounts for the 12 known particles of matter (quarks and leptons) that interact via the strong, weak, and electromagnetic fundamental forces.[72] Dynamics are described in terms of matter particles exchanging gauge bosons (gluons, W and Z bosons, and photons, respectively).[73] The Standard Model also predicts a particle known as the Higgs boson.[72] In July 2012 CERN, the European laboratory for particle physics, announced the detection of a particle consistent with the Higgs boson,[74] an integral part of the Higgs mechanism.

Nuclear physics is the field of physics that studies the constituents and interactions of atomic nuclei. The most commonly known applications of nuclear physics are nuclear power generation and nuclear weapons technology, but the research has provided application in many fields, including those in nuclear medicine and magnetic resonance imaging, ion implantation in materials engineering, and radiocarbon dating in geology and archaeology.

Atomic, molecular, and optical

Atomic, molecular, and optical physics (AMO) is the study of matter—matter and light—matter interactions on the scale of single atoms and molecules. The three areas are grouped together because of their interrelationships, the similarity of methods used, and the commonality of their relevant energy scales. All three areas include both classical, semi-classical and quantum treatments; they can treat their subject from a microscopic view (in contrast to a macroscopic view).

Atomic physics studies the electron shells of atoms. Current research focuses on activities in quantum control, cooling and trapping of atoms and ions,[75][76][77] low-temperature collision dynamics and the effects of electron correlation on structure and dynamics. Atomic physics is influenced by the nucleus (see hyperfine splitting), but intra-nuclear phenomena such as fission and fusion are considered part of nuclear physics.

Molecular physics focuses on multi-atomic structures and their internal and external interactions with matter and light. Optical physics is distinct from optics in that it tends to focus not on the control of classical light fields by macroscopic objects but on the fundamental properties of optical fields and their interactions with matter in the microscopic realm.

Condensed matter

Velocity-distribution data of a gas of rubidium atoms, confirming the discovery of a new phase of matter, the Bose–Einstein condensate

Condensed matter physics is the field of physics that deals with the macroscopic physical properties of matter.[78][79] In particular, it is concerned with the "condensed" phases that appear whenever the number of particles in a system is extremely large and the interactions between them are strong.[80]

The most familiar examples of condensed phases are solids and liquids, which arise from the bonding by way of the electromagnetic force between atoms.[81] More exotic condensed phases include the superfluid[82] and the Bose–Einstein condensate[83] found in certain atomic systems at very low temperature, the superconducting phase exhibited by conduction electrons in certain materials,[84] and the ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic phases of spins on atomic lattices.[85]

Condensed matter physics is the largest field of contemporary physics. Historically, condensed matter physics grew out of solid-state physics, which is now considered one of its main subfields.[86] The term condensed matter physics was apparently coined by Philip Anderson when he renamed his research group—previously solid-state theory—in 1967.[87] In 1978, the Division of Solid State Physics of the American Physical Society was renamed as the Division of Condensed Matter Physics.[86] Condensed matter physics has a large overlap with chemistry, materials science, nanotechnology and engineering.[80]

Astrophysics

The deepest visible-light image of the universe, the Hubble Ultra-Deep Field. The vast majority of objects seen above are distant galaxies.

Astrophysics and astronomy are the application of the theories and methods of physics to the study of stellar structure, stellar evolution, the origin of the Solar System, and related problems of cosmology. Because astrophysics is a broad subject, astrophysicists typically apply many disciplines of physics, including mechanics, electromagnetism, statistical mechanics, thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, relativity, nuclear and particle physics, and atomic and molecular physics.[88]

The discovery by Karl Jansky in 1931 that radio signals were emitted by celestial bodies initiated the science of radio astronomy. Most recently, the frontiers of astronomy have been expanded by space exploration. Perturbations and interference from the Earth's atmosphere make space-based observations necessary for infrared, ultraviolet, gamma-ray, and X-ray astronomy.

Physical cosmology is the study of the formation and evolution of the universe on its largest scales. Albert Einstein's theory of relativity plays a central role in all modern cosmological theories. In the early 20th century, Hubble's discovery that the universe is expanding, as shown by the Hubble diagram, prompted rival explanations known as the steady state universe and the Big Bang.

The Big Bang was confirmed by the success of Big Bang nucleosynthesis and the discovery of the cosmic microwave background in 1964. The Big Bang model rests on two theoretical pillars: Albert Einstein's general relativity and the cosmological principle. Cosmologists have recently established the ΛCDM model of the evolution of the universe, which includes cosmic inflation, dark energy, and dark matter.

Numerous possibilities and discoveries are anticipated to emerge from new data from the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope over the upcoming decade and vastly revise or clarify existing models of the universe.[89][90] In particular, the potential for a tremendous discovery surrounding dark matter is possible over the next several years.[91] Fermi will search for evidence that dark matter is composed of weakly interacting massive particles, complementing similar experiments with the Large Hadron Collider and other underground detectors.

IBEX is already yielding new astrophysical discoveries: "No one knows what is creating the ENA (energetic neutral atoms) ribbon" along the termination shock of the solar wind, "but everyone agrees that it means the textbook picture of the heliosphere—in which the Solar System's enveloping pocket filled with the solar wind's charged particles is plowing through the onrushing 'galactic wind' of the interstellar medium in the shape of a comet—is wrong."[92]

Current research

Feynman diagram signed by R. P. Feynman
A typical phenomenon described by physics: a magnet levitating above a superconductor demonstrates the Meissner effect.

Research in physics is continually progressing on a large number of fronts.

In condensed matter physics, an important unsolved theoretical problem is that of high-temperature superconductivity.[93] Many condensed matter experiments are aiming to fabricate workable spintronics and quantum computers.[80][94]

In particle physics, the first pieces of experimental evidence for physics beyond the Standard Model have begun to appear. Foremost among these are indications that neutrinos have non-zero mass. These experimental results appear to have solved the long-standing solar neutrino problem, and the physics of massive neutrinos remains an area of active theoretical and experimental research. The Large Hadron Collider has already found the Higgs boson, but future research aims to prove or disprove the supersymmetry, which extends the Standard Model of particle physics. Research on the nature of the major mysteries of dark matter and dark energy is also currently ongoing.[95]

Although much progress has been made in high-energy, quantum, and astronomical physics, many everyday phenomena involving complexity,[96] chaos,[97] or turbulence[98] are still poorly understood. Complex problems that seem like they could be solved by a clever application of dynamics and mechanics remain unsolved; examples include the formation of sandpiles, nodes in trickling water, the shape of water droplets, mechanisms of surface tension catastrophes, and self-sorting in shaken heterogeneous collections.[f][99]

These complex phenomena have received growing attention since the 1970s for several reasons, including the availability of modern mathematical methods and computers, which enabled complex systems to be modeled in new ways. Complex physics has become part of increasingly interdisciplinary research, as exemplified by the study of turbulence in aerodynamics and the observation of pattern formation in biological systems. In the 1932 Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics, Horace Lamb said:[100]

I am an old man now, and when I die and go to heaven there are two matters on which I hope for enlightenment. One is quantum electrodynamics, and the other is the turbulent motion of fluids. And about the former I am rather optimistic.

Physics Education

Physics education or physics teaching refers to the education methods currently used to teach physics. The occupation is called physics educator or physics teacher. Physics education research refers to an area of pedagogical research that seeks to improve those methods. Historically, physics has been taught at the high school and college level primarily by the lecture method together with laboratory exercises aimed at verifying concepts taught in the lectures. These concepts are better understood when lectures are accompanied with demonstration, hand-on experiments, and questions that require students to ponder what will happen in an experiment and why. Students who participate in active learning for example with hands-on experiments learn through self-discovery. By trial and error they learn to change their preconceptions about phenomena in physics and discover the underlying concepts. Physics education is part of the broader area of science education.

Careers

A physicist is a scientist who specializes in the field of physics, which encompasses the interactions of matter and energy at all length and time scales in the physical universe.[101][102] Physicists generally are interested in the root or ultimate causes of phenomena, and usually frame their understanding in mathematical terms. They work across a wide range of research fields, spanning all length scales: from sub-atomic and particle physics, through biological physics, to cosmological length scales encompassing the universe as a whole. The field generally includes two types of physicists: experimental physicists who specialize in the observation of natural phenomena and the development and analysis of experiments, and theoretical physicists who specialize in mathematical modeling of physical systems to rationalize, explain and predict natural phenomena.[101]

Physicists can apply their knowledge towards solving practical problems or to developing new technologies (also known as applied physics or engineering physics).[103][104][105]

See also

Lists

Notes

  1. ^ Francis Bacon's 1620 Novum Organum was critical in the development of scientific method.[6]
  2. ^ Calculus was independently developed at around the same time by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz; while Leibniz was the first to publish his work and develop much of the notation used for calculus today, Newton was the first to develop calculus and apply it to physical problems. See also Leibniz–Newton calculus controversy
  3. ^ See, for example, the influence of Kant and Ritter on Ørsted.
  4. ^ Concepts which are denoted hypothetical can change with time. For example, the atom of nineteenth-century physics was denigrated by some, including Ernst Mach's critique of Ludwig Boltzmann's formulation of statistical mechanics. By the end of World War II, the atom was no longer deemed hypothetical.
  5. ^ Yet, universalism is encouraged in the culture of physics. For example, the World Wide Web, which was innovated at CERN by Tim Berners-Lee, was created in service to the computer infrastructure of CERN, and was/is intended for use by physicists worldwide. The same might be said for arXiv.org
  6. ^ See the work of Ilya Prigogine, on 'systems far from equilibrium', and others.

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Sources

– Directory of physics related media