Essay Topic Hub

Physics
Essays

786+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

786 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Physics is the branch of science concerned with understanding matter, energy, motion, and the fundamental forces that govern nature. It appears across a wide range of academic courses, from introductory science surveys to specialized engineering and philosophy of science programs. The field spans an enormous timeline, from Aristotle's early inquiries into form and matter to modern theoretical and experimental work, making it intellectually rich territory for students asked to explain how the physical world operates. Its questions are foundational: how light behaves, how objects move, how matter is structured, and whether life exists beyond Earth.

Student papers on this topic take genuinely varied approaches. Some are historically oriented, examining figures such as Niels Bohr or landmark experiments like the Michelson experiment for measuring light. Others are applied and case-study driven, analyzing the physics of missile flight, drag effects on swimmer performance, or the mechanics of treadle irrigation pumps. Still others explore broader scientific and cultural territory, covering missions to Mars, frequency allocation, or the search for extraterrestrial life, showing that physics intersects with technology, policy, and astronomy alike.

A strong physics essay begins with a clearly scoped thesis — one that commits to explaining a specific phenomenon, evaluating a theory, or analyzing a real-world application rather than surveying the discipline in general terms. Evidence that carries weight includes precise scientific principles, experimental data, and well-sourced technical detail. The most common pitfall is treating physics as a catalog of facts; the best papers use those facts to build and support an actual argument about how or why something in the natural world works the way it does.

786 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Architectural Principles of the Medieval
There is a very close connection that can be seen between the architectural efforts and achievements of medieval cultures and the cultural visions and experiences that these architectural constructions were intended to…
Paper Undergraduate
Reply to Student #1 I
I agree with your statement that diagnosis is a process, not a destination. Too often diagnosis is regarded as giving the clinician a definite 'end point,' which means that although the initial diagnosis might be faulty…
Research Paper Doctorate
Humans Have Been Intrigued by the Workings
¶ … humans have been intrigued by the workings of the human mind. Philosophers and physiologists pondered the questions that psychology, as an independent science, now addresses. Psychology is the study of mind and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
History of atomic theory
Atomic theory is one of the most important theories developed in time in the field of physics and chemistry. The theory analyzes the nature of matter, stating that matter is composed of small units called atoms.
Essay Doctorate
Social Science Research Are Qualitative and Quantitative
The two main paradigms in social science research are qualitative and quantitative research methods. Qualitative research is believed to operate from a subjective, constructionist view of reality, whereas quantitative research operates from an objective, positivist viewpoint of the world. There has been quite a bit of debate over the merits of each of these approaches, often with one paradigm belittling the assumptions of the other. The current literature review explores the philosophical foundations of each paradigm, compares their practical differences, and discusses the strengths and weakness of both approaches as they relate to as they relate to research in the social sciences and to human resources research. The rationale for mixed-methods research, where the two paradigms are combined, is also discussed.
Paper Doctorate
Should Acid Rain Be Made a Political Issue?
Should Acid Rain Be Made a Political Issue?
Thesis Masters
Perception of intelligence
Learning and intelligence is a part of the process of reasoning, and reasoning is based on what is important to that culture. The traditions of learning in China were holistic and group based (politeness, etc.) and thus never developed so much of the individualist ideas that came out of the Enlightenment in the West. When combined with capitalism and the Protestant Ethic, intelligence became defined in the West as "what you know" and "show me what you know" – all very different than Eastern concepts
Research Paper Doctorate
Social science theory and methodology
Religion, Society, and the Scientific Method
Paper Undergraduate
Automated trading systems
The Mathematical Basis of Securities Trading:
Paper Undergraduate
Imaginal psychotherapy: techniques and applications
Time can wind and unwind itself around the psyche until one feels both that one is at the still point of the turning world and also spinning as fast as possible, faster than Einstein could have imagined, faster than the…