Not "the law" - but "the laws", plural. That refers to any of the laws that explain how our Universe works. Read a physics textbook - like the one used in schools - to learn about some of these laws.
what made you wonder about this question . i am a physic to find out more meet me at the Hollywood signs at 04:45pm on 14/05/08
There are no laws for physics. Physics is nothing but studying the environmental and finding the reasons for each event.
a law of physics is a law that states how the world works eg. newtons law that on action has an equal and opposite reaction.
A law of physics is a confirmed rule of physics wheras a principle is something taken to be true but cannot be proven.
he discovered the law of elasticity
...there is an equal and opposite reaction.
Gauss law is a term used in physics. It refers to the distribution of an electric charge in an electric field.
Einstein won the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his services to theoretical physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect".
A law of physics is a confirmed rule of physics wheras a principle is something taken to be true but cannot be proven.
Gauss law
There are "first laws" in several physics disciplines, for example the "First Law of Thermodynamics". There is none that is generally considered to be important enough to be considered the first law of physics in general.
Physics is the study of the laws that govern science.
Isaac Newton created the law of physics.
George Washington
He created the law of physics.
Newtons first law of physics
he discovered the law of elasticity
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Kirchhoff's law's
the law of anomalous expansion of water.