A lava lamp is a study in physics. The lamp functions on density and that density or mass as it is called, changes with the addition of heat to the container. When heat is applied the substance that floats changes to lighter mass and begins to rise. When it reaches the top where it is cooler, it gets dense and sinks.
Your question is extremely general; it is important to specify; - what type of laboratory: chemistry, physics, biology, mineralogy, etc. - what it the desired scientific level - money available - area available - the scope of this laboratory - the qualifications of the personnel etc., etc.
Modern physical chemistry was developed after 1850.
Yes, it is true.
Quite simply, it isn't. In the 18th and 19th century, most scientists were polymaths - the same scientist might examine questions in biology and physics and then go on to look at geology or chemistry without thinking that he (and it usually was a he) was looking at a different subject. As we came to know more of how the world worked, it became convenient for people to specialise in certain areas of knowledge - to be good at chemistry involved so much chemical knowledge that it was no longer possible for a single person to know all of chemistry AND also be much good at, say, Geology. At that stage, scientific study was split into areas relating to different areas - physics, chemistry, biology, geology, zoology, medicine etc., mainly because the areas were easier to teach that way. We are now at the stage where no normal scientist can understand all of any single subject, so a chemist might specialise in physical chemistry or inorganic chemistry, and even within that specialisation, they will become an expert in only a small area. The best science now involves several scientists collaborating - bringing their expertise in chemistry with someone else's expertise in biology and another person's expertise in medicine, for example, to aim at a cure for a particular disease. Finally, don't think about science being a subject - it is a method of thinking that allows you to put up an idea, test it with an experiment and see if your idea holds water, whether it needs to be improved, or whether it is wrong and needs to be discarded.
Yes,because the larger the volume the transportation increases...such as in biology alveoli expands in our lungs so that the exchange of gases takes place,and also in terms of physics it reduces friction...
nucleas in biology and earth in physics
The problem with subdividing science into diffrent ares is that there is often overlap between them. The boundary around each area of science is not always clear. For instance, much of biology is also chemistry, while much of chemistry is also physics. And a rapidly growing area of physics is biophysics, the application of physics to biology. The problem with subdividing science into diffrent ares is that there is often overlap between them. The boundary around each area of science is not always clear. For instance, much of biology is also chemistry, while much of chemistry is also physics. And a rapidly growing area of physics is biophysics, the application of physics to biology.
There are the Mainly 3 areas of Science: 1. Biology (Include Medical, Biotechnology, Agriculture, Pharma) 2. Physics (Include SpaceScience, Physical) 3.Chemistry(ChemicalIndustries)
There are innumerable branches of science. No matter how small a field is, is a branch and there are new fields opening every day. Just look at science journal publisher and there hundred of subjects just a for a limited area like subatomic physics. Big branches include physics, chemistry, and biology where there all sorts of overlapping subjects like chemical physics.
Depends- Biology, chemistry, or physics? Biology could be a study of plant growth influenced by different factors, physics could be a study of magnetic fields, chemistry can be a study of chemical reactions, generation of gasses, etc. Find an area you like, do some exploring- and remember that the research and write-up of your project is the important part.
This could refer to a particular science discipline such as biology, physics, chemistry, geology, astronomy etc as the area or branch of science under consideration, or more specifically in geometry an area is the quantity of two-dimensional space occupied by an enclosure.
In the context of study at school and college a subjectis an area of study, such as English, Spanish, Biology, Chemistry
There are two specific ares of Physical Science, these TWO are Physics and Chemistry.
Not much really. That's more of a physics area.
which field of science is important to glass artists?zoology, chemistry, physics, or botany
Ernest Ruthrford was a physicist, specialist in nuclear physics; but also with contributions in nuclear chemistry/radiochemistry.
The noun 'science' is an uncountable noun as a word for the study and knowledge of the physical world, or an area of study that uses scientific methods (medical science, planetary science, etc.)The noun 'science' is a countable noun as a word for a scientific subject such as chemistry, physics, or biology. They are examples of sciences.