PHYSICS IS THE SCIENCE DEALING WITH THE PROPERTIES, CHANGES, INTERACTIONS, ETC,. OF MATTER AND ENERGY. CHEMISTRY IS THE SCIENCE DEALING WITH THE COMPOSITION AND PROPERTIES OF SUBSTANCES, AND WITH THE REACTIONS BY WHICH SUBSTANCES ARE PRODUCED FROM AND CONVERTED INTO OTHER SUBSTANCES. BOTH COURSES REQUIRE INTELLIGENCE AND EFFORT TO FOLLOW. DECIDE IF ONE COURSE IS MORE SUITABLE TO WHAT YOU PLAN ON GOING TO COLLEGE FOR OR YOUR FUTURE EMPLOYMENT. BY DEFINITION PHYSICS IS THE MORE DIFFICULT COURSE.
Physics is the basis for all other sciences. Chemistry is primarily ruled by protons and electrons. Their existence behavior and charges are defined by physics. Biology is just incredibly advanced chemistry that can perform basic Newtonian physics. Geology is thermal physics and plate tectonics(high mass low velocity collisions). Astronomy is gravity, collisions, and extreme temperature interactions (also quite a bit of chemistry, but that's just physics). You get the picture. Physics is a description of everything.
Yes, Max Planck attended high school in Munich, Germany. He went on to study at the University of Munich and later obtained his doctorate in physics at the University of Berlin.
To get accepted into a Physics program for grad school you must apply in time, most of the work they look at is not from your senior year but mostly from previous years, make sure it looks good. Find the right program and make sure your grades are good enough.
When something is described as dense, it means it is closely packed or crowded together, with a high mass or number within a given volume. This term is commonly used in physics and chemistry to refer to the compactness of a substance.
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1981 was divided, one half jointly to Nicolaas Bloembergen and Arthur Leonard Schawlow for their contribution to the development of laser spectroscopy and the other half to Kai M. Siegbahn for his contribution to the development of high-resolution electron spectroscopy.
Chemistry.
Depends on your particular high school, but most high school curriculum advance first with biology, then chemistry, and then finally with physics. You should consult with your high school counselor to see if it's possible to change the order or even in certain cases, skip the course entirely.
Chemistry is mainly for engineering courses & an architecture course would mainly need physics.
If you want to become a scientist you will need to get a degree at minimum. Do you want to do physics chemistry or biology? If unsure do all three. And mathematics. While you MAY not require any as a prerequisite, doing them will make tertiary studies easier to transition to. For each steam, recommended prerequisites could be... Physics: physics, mathematics. Chemistry: physics, chemistry, mathematics. Biology: biology, mathematics, maybe chemistry.
Different science lessons are: Chemistry, Biology and Physics.
Physics, chemistry and engineering i think
Biology Chemistry English Physics
Biology, Chemistry and Physics butpsychologywont hurt
In high school, you need advance biology, chemistry, physics and mathematics.
You will need chemistry, straight biology and physics.
Math, physics, biology, and chemistry
Start with Physics, Chemistry, and Biology, with a strong dose of math.