Classical Mechanics
Quantum Physics
Special & General Relativity
Aerospace/Fluid dynamics & Electromagnetism
Trivia
100

Newton's three laws of motion

1. Inertia (an object stays at rest or in uniform motion unless acted upon by a net force).

2. F=ma (force equals mass times acceleration)

3. Action-Reaction (for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.)

100
The phenomenon that measuring the state of a particle on one side of the universe can seemingly determine the state of another particle far away
What is quantum entanglement?
100

The acceleration of light (travels in a straight line at a speed of 3*108m/s in a vacuum)

What is 0?

100

The effect of applying the same force over less area

What is a higher pressure?

200

An object with its mass distributed away from its axis of rotation has this

What is a higher rotational inertia?

200

The meaning of "quantum" in quantum mechanics

What is the fact that at extremely small scales, phenomena can be separated into discrete packets. (A seemingly continuous force at the quantum level occurs in increments, light reaching your eyes is just a stream of distinct particles) 

200

The four fundamental interactions in physics that govern everything in the universe.

What are gravity, electromagnetism, the strong nuclear force, and the weak nuclear force?

200

The speed that air moves over an aircraft wing compared to the air underneath. (Faster, the same, slower) Hint: think about Bernoulli's principle

What is faster? (or "what is a higher velocity?")

200

Who invented the experiment that proved the universe was asymmetrical (parity is not conserved)?

Who is Madame Wu?

300

Torque and its meaning

What is the rotational effect of a force that depends on how strong the force is, how far it acts from the pivot, and the angle at which it is applied?

*Formula: Torque = Fdsin(θ)

300

The physical or mathematical principle where multiple overlapping waves, quantum states, or stimuli combine to form a net system.

What is superposition?

300

The reason why the "Twin Paradox" is not a paradox

Why does the traveling twin's acceleration break the symmetry of the paradox?

(or "what is the Lorentz transformation" if you want to brute force the answer using math or spacetime diagram/worldline shift)

300

The name of the partial differential equations that describe how electric and magnetic fields are generated by electric charges and currents

What are Maxwell's equations?

300

The principle in Lagrangian mechanics that the path that an object takes will always minimize a certain quanitity

What is the Principle of Least Action? or Why is action minimized?

400

The name of the phenomenon where there is more matter than antimatter in the universe

What is baryon asymmetry?

400

This cosmic phenomenon, famously observed during a 1919 solar eclipse, occurs when the curved spacetime around a massive body acts like a giant magnifying glass, bending the path of distant starlight.

What is gravitational lensing? (Also accepted: light bending)

500

Under classical physics, gravity behaves like a smooth, continuous ramp; however, to successfully quantize it, physicists must prove that spacetime actually behaves like this structural alternative.

What is a staircase?

500

The main creator of the equation relating the angles at which rays are refracted with their incident angles.

hint: If you played last time, or have taken AP physics 2, you should know this.

Who is Willebrord Snellius?