The physical universe has many moving parts and is not simply what is observed through the naked eye. Physics is also how the most prominent objects interact with the smallest and everything in between. Since physics is such a broad subject, it has to be broken into smaller categories or disciplines, also known as fields of study.
There are three main categories of modern physical study:
- Classical physics covers electromagnetism, classical mechanics, thermodynamics, and statistical mechanics. Classic physics provides action and reaction, showing how objects acting in a system will interact with other objects in that same system.
- Relativity has two types of study; there is general and specific relativity. General relativity deals with how the law of gravity interacts with objects; this has a significant bearing in astrophysics and astronomy. Special relativity concerns how objects interact in a vacuum or are devoid of gravity.
- Quantum physics is the most recent course of study in physics. Here, scientists study quantum mechanics, quantum statistics, quantum electrodynamics, and quantum field theory. This branch deals primarily with objects at an atomic and subatomic level. It answers questions like, "what makes a proton different from a neutron?"
Mechanics
The study of mechanics is both broad and specific. Broadly, mechanics study objects, their motion, energy, and how they interact with other objects and energy. There are two sub-branches of mechanics, quantum mechanics and classical mechanics.
- Quantum mechanics, studies how atom and subatomic particles act and react with one another; similar to how the atom is held together, what happens if two atoms collide? What makes up the atomic particles; how and why do two atoms bond; what holds together millions of atoms into a complex compound?
- Classical mechanics follows the same principles as quantum, at a much larger scale. Examples of classical mechanics would be predicting planetary orbits or the path of a bullet, black holes, friction between a car tire and the road, why water has surface tension, or the arc of a baseball as it is thrown across home plate.
Mechanics can explain a minor interaction, like why an electron is attracted to a proton, and the most significant interaction, like why the earth orbits the sun.
Optics
One of our two most important senses is that of sight. In physics, the study of light and its properties is called optics.
One reason light is a fascinating study subject is that it contains the properties of a wave and particles. Additionally, electromagnetic waves make up light, meaning it has properties of electricity and magnetism and does not need a medium to move.
There are several different types of light:
- Visible
- Ultraviolet
- Infrared
- X-ray
- Radio Waves
- Gamma Rays
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