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Introduction
Physics is the
most fundamental of all sciences. The scale at which it is studied
ranges through the largest and most massive objects such as galaxies,
to the smallest and least massive objects such as sub-atomic particles.
The work of renowned physicists such as Newton, Planck, Einstein
and recently Hawking has fundamentally changed our views on the
nature of the universe, yet Physics remains full of exciting questions
and mysteries to solve. Physics is both challenging because it is
an exacting science and good fun because it is lively and practical.
Physics is the
study of the fundamentals of everything in the universe. If you
look around you and start asking questions like 'why does that happen
?' or 'how does that work ?' then you are thinking like a physicist.
When you start
learning Physics, you will begin with motion: velocity, acceleration,
force, mass , energy - these are some of the concepts found at the
beginning of a Physics course. The principles developed apply to
the motion of anything - planets, electrons, athletes, owls … If
you continue to study Physics as a second year student, you will
learn new laws and theories (The Gas Laws, Newton's Theory of Gravitation,
Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity) that help to explain more
complex aspects of the natural world.
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