Classical Physics Forum

Join expert classical physics discussion on the principles developed before the rise of relativity and quantum mechanics. Including mechanics, electrodynamics, thermodynamics, optics.
  • Redirect
Replies
Views
4
Replies
114
Views
1K
Replies
70
Views
4K
Replies
23
Views
582
Replies
8
Views
161
Replies
11
Views
216
Replies
9
Views
133
Replies
53
Views
2K
Replies
8
Views
160
Replies
0
Views
78
Replies
9
Views
147
Replies
16
Views
324
Replies
4
Views
141
Replies
8
Views
229
Replies
2
Views
114
Replies
2
Views
155
Replies
23
Views
414
Replies
3
Views
261
Replies
3
Views
175
Replies
3
Views
320
Replies
15
Views
893
Replies
3
Views
218
Replies
5
Views
203
Replies
7
Views
325
Replies
1
Views
196
Replies
1
Views
166
Replies
77
Views
1K
Replies
6
Views
188
Replies
16
Views
282
Replies
13
Views
233
Replies
4
Views
284
Replies
1
Views
194
Replies
6
Views
379
Replies
10
Views
415
Replies
0
Views
234
Replies
5
Views
557
Replies
1
Views
226
Replies
1
Views
209
Replies
23
Views
491
Replies
10
Views
371
Replies
10
Views
367
Replies
8
Views
348
Replies
10
Views
345
Replies
101
Views
13K
Replies
20
Views
775
Replies
15
Views
655
Replies
10
Views
372
Replies
7
Views
657
Replies
6
Views
412
Replies
5
Views
458
Replies
4
Views
413
Replies
9
Views
587
Replies
4
Views
352
Replies
12
Views
591
Replies
3
Views
580
Replies
18
Views
624
Replies
61
Views
1K
Replies
6
Views
709

Classical Physics

Welcome to the Classical Physics forum!

Classical physics refers to the traditional theories and principles of physics developed before the advent of quantum mechanics and relativity in the early 20th century. It includes classical mechanics, electromagnetism, and thermodynamics.

Classical mechanics, formulated by Newton, describes the motion of objects and the forces acting upon them. Maxwell's equations encompass classical electromagnetism, elucidating the behavior of electric and magnetic fields. Thermodynamics, developed by Carnot and others, focuses on the principles governing heat, work, and energy transfer in macroscopic systems.

While highly successful in explaining everyday phenomena, classical physics encountered limitations at extreme scales, leading to the development of quantum mechanics and relativity to describe the behavior of particles at the atomic and cosmic levels, respectively.
Back
Top