Physical science and chemistry are equally important.
I was better at physical science rather than biological science.
alchemy is better than chemistry although chemistry is fun to do
life science and physical science is not same.Most of the students take life science in Bsc if they have not studied maths till class XII.whereas physical science is much better than life science and more career,job and research oppurtunities are there in physical science.
False. That sounds more like chemistry than physics.
The two main divisions of natural science are biological science (or life sciences), which study living organisms, and physical science, which study non-living systems including physics, chemistry, and earth sciences.
commerce is thousand times better than science
physical science is more broad which includes the sciences such as physics and chemistry.
Let's hope him is better in chemistry than in English. Basically, we don't know. We don't know what your school is like, and "in 11" is not terribly clear either. 11 years old? 11th grade? I'll assume the latter, since you usually don't get to choose subjects at 11 years old. Physical science, chemistry, and advanced chemistry are three courses that are often taught in high school that are either chemistry or closely related to chemistry. The other science courses that are usually offered (biology, geology/"earth science", physics) are more distantly related, though if you're good at chemistry you'll probably be at least okay at physics... maybe not biology/geology so much, though.
The link between chemistry and Biology is much more obvious than that of physics and chemistry. Every reaction within an organism is a chemical reaction. Every biological being is chemical. That is why a large branch of biology is called biochemistry. In my opinion, there is more of an effect of physics on chemistry than chemistry on physics. What I mean is that physical parameters often dictate chemical reaction kinetics. Also, areas such as electricity (Movement of electrons/positive holes) is heavily chemistry based, more obvious in batteries
Physics and chemistry is the base of all other sciences. Physics is the study of the properties of matter and energy and how they interact with each other, and chemistry is the study of how matter interacts with each other, how the combine, or how they change. So when it comes to biology it is a mixture of chemistry and physics. The way the human body is shaped is to work in an environment with gravity (physics). The way your body breaks down food into smaller sugars, fats, and proteins for later use (chemistry). Biology is the study of the chemical and physical properties of living creatures (and maybe nonliving (viruses). So to say that biological science is from physical science is somewhat true. I would say though that biology is more focused on chemistry than physics. Biology is the study of life and living organisms, but physics is the study of motion. They are indeed but to the definition of physics I would add ", mass and energy". Physics also comes into biology in many ways, the simplest being the principles of sight and hearing. It's also the foundation science, for without the laws of physics nothing else could exist.
Physical chemistry is considered the most fundamental division of chemistry as it focuses on the study of the physical and chemical properties of matter and the principles that govern their behavior. It combines the principles of physics and chemistry to explain and predict the behavior of matter at the atomic and molecular levels.
When using scientific notation the coefficient does not have to be less than any number or value from physical science.