Top 10 Experiments in Physics History

all time top 10 experiments conducted in physics
Great physics experiments (image of science museum London)

Physics is an exploratory science. New experiments in physics change or expand our existing knowledge in one way or another. Let us find out how this has happened in history.


10. Galileo's Tower of Pisa experiment

Before Galileo, a majority of people used to follow the teachings of ancient Greek philosopher, Aristotle, who had proclaimed that different weights when dropped from same height experienced different amounts of attraction from the Earth thus falling at different speeds.

It is said that in 1589 Galileo climbed atop Tower of Pisa and dropped two objects of different masses in order to debunk Aristotelian belief.

all time top 10 experiments conducted in physics

In 1971, astronaut David Scott re-created Galileo's famous experiment on the moon by dropping a hammer and a feather simultaneously. You can watch it happen in this clip.



9. Faraday's law of induction

A sudden movement of a magnet through a coil produces a reading on the galvanometer meaning that a changing magnetic field can induce an electric current in the coil.

top 10 experiments conducted in physics

This observation was first made by Michael Faraday in the year 1831. Today, electric generators use the same principle to convert mechanical energy into electrical energy that powers our household electric appliances.


8. Michelson Morley experiment

Does light, like other waves, require a medium to travel? Scientists of the 19th century thought so. They proposed the existence of an invisible stationary substance permeating through all of space that they named aether.

top 10 experiments conducted in physics

In the 1880s, American physicist Albert Michelson thought of discovering the aether.

If aether really exists, Earth moving through it would cause a wind in the same way that there seems to be a wind outside a moving car.


To a person in the car, the air outside the car would seem like a moving substance. In the same way, aether should seem like a moving substance to things on Earth.

Michelson designed an interferometer to measure the speed of the "aether wind" in 1887 along with one of his colleagues, Edward Morley.

top 10 experiments conducted in physics

However, no aether wind was detected by the experimental setup making it the most famous failed experiment in history. But, it had been shown that light required no substance medium whatsoever to travel in space.


7. Double slit experiment

Newton believed that light was a stream of energy-carrying particles. But he was proven wrong by Thomas Young, in 1801, who demonstrated with experiment that light was a wave.

top 10 experiments conducted in physics

In this experiment, when light emitted from two sources is forced to interfere, an unexpected pattern is formed on a distant screen. This interference pattern can be explained by wave theory of light only.


6. Discovery of electron

The atom was greatly regarded as the smallest possible structure in the universe. In 1897, however, Joseph Thomson performed a groundbreaking experiment suggesting that atom was divisible.

top 10 experiments conducted in physics

Thomson used a cathode ray tube, which is a vacuum-sealed glass tube with a cathode and anode fixed inside it. A beam of electrons was observed to move from one end to another upon the application of high voltage.

Thomson also identified that electron was not electrically neutral because he observed a deflection in the beam when an external electric field was applied.


5. Photoelectric effect

top 10 experiments conducted in physics

In 1887, German experimental physicist Heinrich Hertz stumbled upon an amazing phenomenon, the photoelectric effect. He discovered that certain metal electrodes when illuminated by the UV light produced electric sparks.

Two decades later, Einstein proposed an explanation of the photoelectric effect using a concept first put forward by Max Planck that light waves consist of tiny bundles or packets of energy known as photons or quanta.


4. Davisson Germer experiment

top 10 experiments conducted in physics

It was proposed by physicist Louis de Broglie that matter had particle as well as wave nature simultaneously. Davisson and Germer set about to test de Broglie's hypothesis in laboratory.

If electron could behave like a wave, it could interfere with another electron wave much like the light waves do. In 1925, the duo succeeded in obtaining interference pattern.

top 10 experiments conducted in physics


3. Gravity probe b

This was a satellite-based experiment which was launched on 20 April, 2004 by NASA. Its mission was to measure the space-time curvature around the earth as proposed by Einstein. Total cost of this project was about $750 million.

top 10 experiments conducted in physics

This was accomplished by measuring the tiny changes in the direction of spin of four gyroscopes contained in the satellite. Initial results confirmed the expected geodetic effect to an accuracy of about 1%.

2. Higgs boson discovery

The Higgs field is a field of energy that is thought to exist in every region of the universe. The field is accompanied by a fundamental particle known as the Higgs boson, which is used by the field to continuously interact with other particles, such as the electron.

top 10 experiments conducted in physics
Higgs interaction

In 2012, the particle was finally discovered. Peter Higgs became a worldwide sensation and a Nobel Prize winner.


1. LIGO experiment

The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory is a large-scale physics observatory which was designed to detect cosmic gravitational waves as predicted by Einstein's general theory of relativity.

top 10 experiments conducted in physics

By 2017, LIGO had made five detections of gravitational waves, the first four of which were because of colliding black hole pairs. The fifth event, on August 17, 2017, was the first detection of a collision of two neutron stars.

How To Find Meaning in Life With Physics And Comedy


Einstein had once said, "Put your hand on a hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an hour. Sit with a pretty girl for an hour, and it seems like a minute." That was him describing his famous theory of relativity, but if you've chuckled to yourself after reading it, then you are in good company.

Because according to physicist and comedian Rupesh Mahore, physics and comedy have helped him find purpose in life. How so?



Like others in India, Rupesh was brought up (and trained) to believe that engineering was the most respected profession ever. After many years of severe hard work, he managed to enter one of the top institutes in the country, IIT-Delhi.

And to pursue what again? A bachelors degree in textile technology; Rupesh didn't even know if that was a thing, to be honest!

Fast forward to today: Rupesh is a physics student at NIT Rourkela instead, and at the same time, one of the popular faces in Eastern India's comedy circuit, having shared the stage with likes of Zakir Khan, Atul Khatri, Sorabh Pant and others!

A trio of comics

Leading English daily The Times of India has described his humour as "intellectual and authoritative". But besides being a comic, Rupesh is an educator as well.

He says, "When teaching physics, there is deep honesty and integrity if I am able to deliver fundamentals of the universe to a student and give a better perspective to it."

Rupesh has worked under the guidance of Professor H.C. Verma, best-selling author of Concepts of Physics. Considering his research on materials science, Rupesh has been selected to work at Indian space agency's Laboratory of Electro Optical Systems (LEOS) where he would be working for the mission of Chandrayaan-2 and Gaganyaan.

With Professor Verma



But in order to be where he is at today, Rupesh has had to make bold decisions in the past. He dropped out of engineering college in 2016, "If it wasn't for physics, I wouldn't be here," Rupesh adds.

Convincing his family and asking for their support was a difficult phase in life. Talking about it further, he says, "In India, students and their guardians are not aware of the diverse range of career choices available, which has led to students ending up in a flock. We need to see sciences and arts in the right manner to actually live the best life possible."

After dropping out, Rupesh started teaching physics to high school students in his locality earning a bare minimum. Then, one thing led to another and he began performing on stage.

canvas laugh club

In the midst of recognition and fame on stage, Rupesh did not forget his love for physics. To carry out his interests in it, he joined the course of integrated physics at NIT in Rourkela. Here, he completed writing his first research paper on nano-fabrication.

Rupesh says, "For me, physics has allowed me to understand the world for better and stand-up comedy a liberating art form has given me solace." Clearly, his example is enough to inspire any physics student (who also has some sense of humour).

A Universe of Atoms, An Atom In The Universe

poem an atom in the universe by richard feynman

American physicist Richard Feynman was a man who always jumped into an adventure. He was an artist, a story-teller and an everyday joker whose life was a combination of his intelligence, curiosity and uncertainty.

In the summer of 1955, Feynman wrote a poem about the earth and its development as a planet of activity, of living things and ultimately of beings who would be able to think and wonder. This poem came right after the discovery of Miller-Urey experiment.


Feynman says,

I stand at the seashore, alone, and start to think.
There are the rushing waves
mountains of molecules
each stupidly minding its own business
trillions apart
yet forming white surf in unison.

poem an atom in the universe by richard feynman

Ages on ages,
before any eyes could see
year after year,
thunderously pounding the shore as now.
For whom? For what?
On a dead planet
with no life to entertain.

Never at rest
tortured by energy
wasted prodigiously by the sun
poured into space.
A mite makes the sea roar.

Deep in the sea
all molecules repeat
the patterns of one another
till complex new ones are formed.
They make others like themselves
and a new dance starts.


Growing in size and complexity
living things
masses of atoms
DNA, protein
dancing a pattern ever more intricate.

Out of the cradle
onto dry land
here it is
standing:
atoms with consciousness;
matter with curiosity.

Stands at the sea,
wonders at wondering: I
a universe of atoms
an atom in the universe.

poem an atom in the universe by richard feynman

In a free verse poem Feynman has demonstrated once again the great extent of his intellect and imagination.

Earth was once a lifeless planet.

A whole lot of activity was still made possible because of the presence of the sun. This went on for "ages and ages" meaning for the amount of time we cannot comprehend since we can only think about in days, weeks and months.


Then, deep in the sea, under conditions as described by British-Indian biologist Haldane, a whole range of organic molecules began to mature as discovered by Miller-Urey experiment in 1952.

A whole lot of activity happened in a distant past to give birth to creatures who could think and wonder today. Feynman ends the story by saying, "My mortal body is indeed a universe of atoms but I am just an atom in the universe myself," which is a great realization.
© 2019-2022
made with by vedang