The Scope of Physics
The Scope of Physics
Lying at the most basic level of physics, the laws of mechanics are
characterized by certain symmetry properties, as exemplified in the
aforementioned symmetry between action and reaction forces.
Other symmetries, such as the invariance (i.e., unchanging form) of
the laws under reflections and rotations carried out in space,
reversal of time, or transformation to a different part of space or to
a different epoch of time, are present both in classical mechanics
and in relativistic mechanics, and with certain restrictions, also in
quantum mechanics. The symmetry properties of the theory can be
shown to have as mathematical consequences basic principles
known as conservation laws, which assert the constancy in time of
the values of certain physical quantities under prescribed
conditions. The conserved quantities are the most important ones in
physics; included among them are mass and energy (in relativity
theory, mass and energy are equivalent and are conserved
together), momentum, angular momentum, and electric charge.