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  2. Experimenting with Babies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experimenting_with_Babies

    Experimenting with Babies: 50 Amazing Science Projects You Can Perform on Your Kid is a 2013 non-fiction book written by Shaun Gallagher and illustrated by Colin Hayes. The book provides a series of home-based experiments that can be performed on infants aged birth to two years to test their cognitive, motor, social and behavioural development.

  3. List of experiments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_experiments

    Stern–Gerlach experiment (1920): Otto Stern and Walther Gerlach demonstrates particle spin. Chicago Pile-1 (1942): Enrico Fermi and Leó Szilárd build the first critical nuclear reactor (1942) Wu experiment (1956): Chien-Shiung Wu leads the team that disproves the conservation of parity in particle physics.

  4. List of experiments in physics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_experiments_in_physics

    Bell tests. BICEP and Keck Array. Coincidence method. Discovery of the neutron. Large Hadron Collider experiments. List of Super Proton Synchrotron experiments. Precision tests of QED. Tests of special relativity. Tests of relativistic energy and momentum.

  5. List of Nova episodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nova_episodes

    Re-narrated Horizon episode, first aired in the UK in 1972. [4]We give you a behind-the-scenes look at the making of a nature film. Oxford Scientific Films Unit shows how it tackles such problems as filming a wood wasp laying its eggs inside trees, the hatching of a chick and the courtship rituals of the stickleback.

  6. Timeline of scientific experiments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_scientific...

    1863 – Gregor Mendel 's pea plant experiments (Mendel's laws of inheritance). 1887 – Heinrich Hertz discovers the photoelectric effect. 1887 – Michelson and Morley: Michelson–Morley experiment, showing that the speed of light is invariant. 1896 – Henri Becquerel discovers radioactivity. 1897 – J. J. Thomson discovers the electron.

  7. 50 Science Trivia Questions People Always Get Wrong - AOL

    www.aol.com/50-science-trivia-questions-people...

    If you can answer 50 percent of these science trivia questions correctly, you may be a genius. The post 50 Science Trivia Questions People Always Get Wrong appeared first on Reader's Digest.

  8. Science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science

    Science is a systematic discipline that builds and organises knowledge in the form of testable hypotheses and predictions about the universe. [1] [2] Modern science is typically divided into two or three major branches: [3] the natural sciences (e.g., physics, chemistry, and biology), which study the physical world; and the behavioural sciences (e.g., economics, psychology, and sociology ...

  9. Scientific theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_theory

    A scientific theory is a well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world, based on a body of facts that have been repeatedly confirmed through observation and experiment. Such fact-supported theories are not "guesses" but reliable accounts of the real world. The theory of biological evolution is more than "just a theory".