Whatever goes up and remains within the influence of earths gravity must come down, or circle the earth as a satellite.
It doesn't mean much. The Higgs Boson is only necessary for the Standard Model to be correct; the Standard Model excludes gravity, and String Theory is a theory of quantum gravity. The two are separate from one another.
It depends on what you mean by leading. A few good candidates are string theory, the standard model and loop quantum gravity.
String theory answered the question of a T.O.E - Theory of Everything. It explained many unresolved problems like the opposition of Quantum Mechanics and Einstein's theory of general relativity. It also includes gravity in the Standard Model and unifies the 4 fundamental forces- gravity, electromagnetic, strong nuclear and weak nuclear
data, hypothesis, model, bias, theory, and law.
a new model of the atom that describe electrons as being in a cloud
a model is different than a theory a model is an actually picture or structure of something a theory is what people might think about something
well theres Einsteins E=MC2 but thats all i know
It means that the theory could be right and the model shows you dimenstionaly.
Scientific theory is not a model but the model can be construct to represent how any scientific theory work. Model of a large system e.g. earth's climate would contain many scientific theory of different field to make it work.
A scientific model can change if new evidence is found. If the new evidence that has been found contradicts the model or theory then a scientific model or theory can change.
Oscillating theory refers to a cosmological model suggesting that the universe undergoes a series of expansions and contractions, or "oscillations," over time. In this model, the universe could expand to a maximum size and then collapse back under its own gravity, possibly leading to a new Big Bang and restarting the cycle. This theory contrasts with the more widely accepted model of a continuously expanding universe. Oscillating theory explores the implications of such cycles on the nature of time, space, and cosmic evolution.
The current theory of gravity, General Relativity, was developed by Albert Einstein between 1905 and 1915. Before that the most advanced model was Newtonian gravity, developed by Isaac Newton. Of course Einstein's model is identical to Newton's in the low mass limit.