Want this question answered?
An Experiment can help you understand the natural laws that relate to matter and energy.
This question maybe should be rephrased to something like: What is physics about? Physics is the study of the natural laws that govern nature. Physicists go about 'discovering' these laws and spend substantial time verifying the discoveries and determining all the consequences. Physics may be an exact or nearly exact science, but it is not perfectly mathematical. That is laws are never proven but only hypothesized. Then everyone goes about looking for an exception. The proof is never complete as the law is never mathematically derived and is always subject to revision.
Physicists study the natural world, from the tiniest subatomic particles to the largest galaxies. They do experiments to discover the laws of nature. They study what things are made of (matter) and how things behave. They also study energy. They learn how it changes from one form to another. Some physicists focus on theories. They ask big questions. They might ask what causes gravity, for example, or what the shape and size of the universe is. Then, they use observation and mathematics to find the answers. Many physicists do experiments. Some, for example, ram atoms into each other in an accelerator to break them apart. They look for clues about what particles come out of atoms when they split. Other physicists apply theories to practical problems. They might create advanced materials, new electronic and optical devices, or medical equipment. Physicists also design research equipment. Some of this equipment is used in surprising ways. For example, the first laser was created for research, but people later discovered that lasers could be used in surgery as well. Most physicists work in research and development. Some do basic research to increase knowledge. Others do applied research. They take what is learned in basic research and use it to create new devices, products, and processes.
they make theories/ laws of about the universe or take theories and improve them or adjust them or say it's completely wrong and once they make/adjust/modify... they give it to expirmental physicist and the expirimental physicists will try to prove you wrong once it's correct you've got yourself a theory :)
Technically it is "outside" the realm of physics, so is classified as "metaphysics". Physicists are not willing to include a physical force produced directly from concentration by the mind in the list of observable or experimental forces. I suppose it would defy the laws of physics in that it would be "an effect with no observable cause".
An Experiment can help you understand the natural laws that relate to matter and energy.
Philosophers sought to uncover fundamental principles and laws that govern the natural world, such as laws of physics, biology, and chemistry. They aimed to understand the underlying order and regularities that shape the universe and explain natural phenomena.
The natural and fundamental laws of the universe. Many of which we have yet to understand completely.
When theoretical physicists work on equations and don't test their hypothesis, experimental physicists test their hypothesis and verify their conclusion. Usually theoretical physicists work on things like black holes and string-theory when experimental physicists work on Newtonian laws.
I don't think they did. The natural laws, as well as certain constants, must already have been established at the moment of the Big Bang. See, there must already have been natural laws in place, for the Big Bang to happen at all.
study of natural laws
There are many memorable physicists - One of the more memorable is Sir Isaac Newton.
Sir Isaac Newton is credited with the systematic collection and articulation of natural laws such as gravity and motion. His work laid the foundation for classical mechanics and revolutionized the way we understand the physical world.
This question maybe should be rephrased to something like: What is physics about? Physics is the study of the natural laws that govern nature. Physicists go about 'discovering' these laws and spend substantial time verifying the discoveries and determining all the consequences. Physics may be an exact or nearly exact science, but it is not perfectly mathematical. That is laws are never proven but only hypothesized. Then everyone goes about looking for an exception. The proof is never complete as the law is never mathematically derived and is always subject to revision.
This phenomenon is way outside our known natural laws.
Natural laws were discovered through moral values during the Greco-Roman period.
the physical world follows natural laws. -Alzie