Within the field of
physics, experimental physics is the category of disciplines and sub-disciplines which use direct means of
observation of physical
phenomena in order to obtain
data about the
universe. The similar goal of all these disciplines is to collect and explain the data which is gathered. The methods vary, from simple experiments and observations to more complicated ones, such as the
LHC.
Current Experiments

Part of the
LHC at
CERN, an experimental endeavor.
Some examples of prominent experimental physics projects are:
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Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider which collides
heavy ions such as
gold ions (it is the first heavy ion collider) and
protons, it is located at
Brookhaven National Laboratory, on Long Island, USA.
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HERA, which collides
electrons or
positrons and
protons, and is part of
DESY, located in
Hamburg, Germany.
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LHC, or the Large
Hadron Collider, which is currently under construction. The LHC will is scheduled to begin operation in 2008 and will be the world's most energetic collider upon completion, it is located at
CERN, on the French-Swiss border near
Geneva.
Method
:''Main article:
Experiment''
Experimental physics uses two main methods of experimental research,
controlled experiments, and
natural experiments. Controlled experiments are often used in
laboratories as laboratories can offer a controlled
environment. Natural experiments are used, for example, in
astrophysics when observing
celestial objects where control of the variables in effect is impossible.
Experimentalists
Experimentalists are
scientists who engage in experimental physics research or study a field contained within the category of experimental physics. Many early experimentalists were also theoretical physicists. Some of the more notable experimental physicists were/are
Galileo Galilei,
Michael Faraday,
Ernst Mach,
Ernest Rutherford,
Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, Antoine
Henri Becquerel,
Marie Curie,
John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh, Sir
Joseph John Thomson,
Max von Laue,
William Lawrence Bragg,
Albert Abraham Michelson,
Robert Andrews Millikan, Sir
Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman,
Enrico Fermi,
Ernest Orlando Lawrence,
William Bradford Shockley, and
John Bardeen.
Timelines
See the timelines below for listings of physics experiments.
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Timeline of classical mechanics
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Timeline of electromagnetism and classical optics
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Timeline of gravitational physics and relativity
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Timeline of nuclear fusion
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Timeline of other background radiation fields
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Timeline of particle physics technology
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Timeline of quantum mechanics, molecular physics, atomic physics, nuclear physics, and particle physics
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Timeline of states of matter and phase transitions
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Timeline of thermodynamics, statistical mechanics, and random processes
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Timeline of particle discoveries
See also
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Physics
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Engineering
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Experiment