There's something called From 'Alchemy to Quarks,' which will teach you everything you have to know, you want to know, about physics.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Before the discovery of quantum mechanics, the framework of physics was this: If you tell me how things are now, I can then use the laws of physics to calculate, and hence predict, how things will be later.
I have always enjoyed explaining physics. In fact it's more than just enjoyment: I need to explain physics.
I'm fascinated with quantum physics.
Physics is really figuring out how to discover new things that are counterintuitive, like quantum mechanics. It's really counterintuitive.
If I want to understand the laws of physics I have to first believe what I read about physics. I have to have faith in what I read.
I hope I have helped to raise the profile of science and to show that physics is not a mystery but can be understood by ordinary people.
A physicist is an atom's way of knowing about atoms.
To me, what makes physics physics is that experiment is intimately connected to theory. It's one whole.
In the lab, we could not see or physically describe the mathematical objects that we called quarks, which we suspected were the key to unlocking the dynamics of the strong force that binds together the clump of protons and neutrons at the center of the atom.
Physics is a hobby of mine, as much as a person of limited intelligence can understand physics.