Can Newtons first law be demonstrated? Professor Walter Lewin stated in one of his lectures it cant. But then commented on its consistency and validity of results.
The difficult part of demonstrating Newton's first law is removing
all forces: gravitational, frictional, electromagnetic, etc. However, it is possible to remove whatever forces can be removed and minimize the rest as much as possible. Consider that there are man-made space probes moving near the edge of our solar system, moving away from our solar system (e.g. Voyager missions). Some gravitational force (mostly from the sun) still acts of the space probes, but it's comparatively small. Friction from space debris is not completely gone either, but it is minimal. Whatever the case, the sum of the external forces on the spacecraft are quite small. And the spacecraft are headed away at approximately a constant velocity, just as Newton's laws would predict.
Perhaps a more testable law is Newton's second law, which states that an object's mass times its acceleration equals the sum of all forces acting on that object.
It's very testable to create a system where the
sum of all forces on an object equals zero (for example, balancing gravitational force with an electrostatic force). If the
sum of all forces is zero, it Newton's second law predicts the acceleration is zero -- meaning that the velocity remains constant. And in those situations, yes, the object keeps a constant velocity, just as Newton's laws predict. These are much more easily testable. If you continue studying physics, you will likely perform such tests yourself such as measuring the acceleration of a "car" on an air-track, which has very little friction. More advanced tests can be done too if you have the equipment.