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- Image 1- The  Wu experiment-  was a  particle-  and  nuclear physics-  experiment conducted in 1956 by the  Chinese American-  physicist  Chien-Shiung Wu-  in collaboration with the Low Temperature Group of the US  National Bureau of Standards- . The experiment's purpose was to establish whether conservation of  parity-  (P-conservation), which was previously established in the  electromagnetic-  and  strong-  interactions, also applied to  weak interactions- . If P-conservation was universal, a mirrored version of the world would behave identically to the mirror image of the current world. If P-conservation were violated, then it would be possible to distinguish between a mirrored version of the world and the mirror image of the current world (where left is mirrored to right and vice versa). - The experiment established that conservation of parity was violated (P-violation) by the weak interaction, thus providing a way to  operationally define left and right- . This result was not expected by the physics community, which had previously regarded parity as a symmetry that applied to all forces of nature.  Tsung-Dao Lee-  and  Chen-Ning Yang- , the theoretical physicists who originated the idea of parity nonconservation and proposed the experiment, received the 1957  Nobel Prize in Physics-  for this result. While not awarded the Nobel Prize,  Chien-Shiung Wu- 's role in the discovery was mentioned in the Nobel Prize acceptance speech of Yang and Lee, but she was not honored until 1978, when she was awarded the first  Wolf Prize- . ( Full article...- ) 
 
- Image 3- In  mathematics- , a  Hilbert space-  is a  real-  or  complex inner product space-  that is also a  complete metric space-  with respect to the metric induced by the inner product. It generalizes the notion of  Euclidean space- . The  inner product-  allows lengths and angles to be defined. Furthermore,  completeness-  means that there are enough  limits-  in the space to allow the techniques of calculus to be used. A Hilbert space is a special case of a  Banach space- . - Hilbert spaces were studied beginning in the first decade of the 20th century by  David Hilbert- ,  Erhard Schmidt- , and  Frigyes Riesz- . They are indispensable tools in the theories of  partial differential equations- ,  quantum mechanics- ,  Fourier analysis-  (which includes applications to  signal processing-  and  heat transfer- ), and  ergodic theory-  (which forms the mathematical underpinning of  thermodynamics- ).  John von Neumann-  coined the term  Hilbert space-  for the abstract concept that underlies many of these diverse applications. The success of Hilbert space methods ushered in a very fruitful era for  functional analysis- . Apart from the classical Euclidean vector spaces, examples of Hilbert spaces include  spaces of square-integrable functions- ,  spaces of sequences- ,  Sobolev spaces-  consisting of  generalized functions- , and  Hardy spaces-  of  holomorphic functions- . ( Full article...- ) 
 
- Image 8
 
 - A NASA portrait of Levine 
-  (born 1942) is an American planetary scientist, author, and research professor in applied science at the  College of William & Mary- , specializing in the atmospheres of the Moon, Earth, and Mars. He has worked as a senior research scientist at  NASA- , developing scientific models of the evolution of the  Earth's early atmosphere- , as well as creating models of the  Martian atmosphere-  for use during the  Viking 1 and 2 Mars Orbiter and Lander Missions- , and was principal investigator and chief scientist of the proposed  ARES Mars Airplane Mission- . He also formed and led the " Charters of Freedom-  Research Team," a group of 12 NASA scientists who worked with the  National Archive and Records Administration-  (NARA) to preserve the  United States Declaration of Independence- , the  Constitution- , and the  Bill of Rights-  when small white spots began appearing on the documents in 1988. Levine's past work also includes assisting in the design of the rescue vehicle that saved 33 Chilean miners in the  2010 Copiapó mining accident- , as well as original research on the feasibility of the " nuclear winter- " hypothesis, and the effects of uncontrolled fires on global warming. - Levine is married to Arlene Spielholz, a former NASA scientist who studied the psychological effects of astronauts spending long time periods in space, and has a daughter and grandson. ( Full article...- ) 
 
- Image 9- Magnetic resonance imaging-  ( MRI- ) is a  medical imaging-  technique used in  radiology-  to generate  pictures of the  anatomy-  and the  physiological-  processes inside the body.  MRI scanners-  use strong  magnetic fields- , magnetic field gradients, and  radio waves-  to form images of the organs in the body. MRI does not involve  X-rays-  or the use of  ionizing radiation- , which distinguishes it from  computed tomography-  (CT) and  positron emission tomography-  (PET) scans. MRI is a  medical application-  of  nuclear magnetic resonance-  (NMR) which can also be used for imaging in other  NMR applications- , such as  NMR spectroscopy- . - MRI is widely used in hospitals and clinics for  medical diagnosis- ,  staging-  and follow-up of disease. Compared to CT, MRI provides better  contrast-  in images of soft tissues, e.g. in the  brain-  or abdomen. However, it may be perceived as less comfortable by patients, due to the usually longer and louder measurements with the subject in a long, confining tube, although "open" MRI designs mostly relieve this. Additionally,  implants-  and other non-removable metal in the body can pose a risk and may exclude some patients from undergoing an MRI examination safely. ( Full article...- ) 
 
 
- Image 13- A  geostationary orbit- , also referred to as a  geosynchronous equatorial orbit-  ( GEO- ), is a  circular geosynchronous orbit-  35,786 - km (22,236 - mi) in altitude above Earth's  equator- , 42,164 - km (26,199 - mi) in radius from Earth's center, and following the  direction-  of  Earth's rotation- . - An object in such an orbit has an  orbital period-  equal to Earth's rotational period, one  sidereal day- , and so to ground observers it appears motionless, in a fixed position in the sky. The concept of a geostationary orbit was popularised by the science fiction writer  Arthur C. Clarke-  in the 1940s as a way to revolutionise telecommunications, and the first  satellite-  to be placed in this kind of orbit was launched in 1963. ( Full article...- ) 
 
- Image 14- The  Avogadro constant- , commonly denoted  NA-  or  L- , is an  SI defining constant-  with an exact value of  6.02214076×1023 mol−1-  when expressed in  reciprocal moles- . It defines the ratio of the  number of constituent particles-  to the  amount of substance-  in a sample, where the particles in question are any designated elementary entity, such as  molecules- ,  atoms- ,  ions- ,  ion pairs- . The numerical value of this constant when expressed in terms of the mole is known as the  Avogadro number- , commonly denoted  N0- . The Avogadro  number-  is an exact number equal to the number of constituent particles in one mole of any substance (by definition of the  mole- ), historically derived from the experimental determination of the number of atoms in 12 grams-  of  carbon-12-  ( 12- C) before the  2019 revision of the SI- , i.e. the gram-to-dalton mass-unit ratio, g/Da. Both the constant and the number are named after the Italian physicist and chemist  Amedeo Avogadro- . - The Avogadro constant is used as a  proportionality factor-  in relating the  amount of substance n(X)- , in a sample of a substance  X- , to the corresponding number of elementary entities  N(X)- : - :   -  ( Full article...- ) 
 
 
 
The following are images from various physics-related articles on Wikipedia.
- Image 3Richard Feynman- 's Los Alamos ID badge (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 4Marie Skłodowska-Curie- (1867–1934) received Nobel prizes in physics (1903) and chemistry (1911). (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 5- Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543) developed a  heliocentric-  model of the  Solar System- . (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 6- Classical physics ( Rayleigh–Jeans law- , black line) failed to explain  black-body radiation-  – the so-called  ultraviolet catastrophe- . The quantum description ( Planck's law- , colored lines) is said to be  modern physics- . (from  Modern physics- ) 
 
- Image 9- One possible signature of a Higgs boson from a simulated  proton- –proton collision. It decays almost immediately into two jets of  hadrons-  and two electrons, visible as lines. (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 11- A  Feynman diagram-  representing (left to right) the production of a photon (blue  sine wave- ) from the  annihilation-  of an electron and its complementary  antiparticle- , the  positron- . The photon becomes a  quark- – antiquark-  pair and a  gluon-  (green spiral) is released. (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 13- Artist's rendition of  Kepler-62f- , a potentially habitable  exoplanet-  discovered using data transmitted by  Kepler space telescope- , named for Kepler (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 14Chien-Shiung Wu-  worked on parity violation in 1956 and announced her results in January 1957. (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 15- Einstein proposed that  gravitation-  results from  masses-  (or their equivalent energies)  curving ("bending")-  the  spacetime-  in which they exist, altering the paths they follow within it. (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 16- Christiaan Huygens (1629–1695) (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 17- The first  Bose–Einstein condensate-  observed in a gas of ultracold  rubidium-  atoms. The blue and white areas represent higher density. (from  Condensed matter physics- ) 
 
- Image 19- The  quantum Hall effect- : Components of the Hall resistivity as a function of the external magnetic field (from  Condensed matter physics- ) 
 
- Image 21- Galileo Galilei (1564–1642), early proponent of the modern scientific worldview and method (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 24- The Hindu-Arabic numeral system. The inscriptions on the  edicts of Ashoka-  (3rd century BCE) display this number system being used by the Imperial  Mauryas- . (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 25- Composite montage comparing  Jupiter-  ( left- ) and its four  Galilean moons-  ( from top- :  Io- ,  Europa- ,  Ganymede- ,  Callisto- ) (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 26- Computer simulation of  nanogears-  made of  fullerene-  molecules. It is hoped that advances in nanoscience will lead to machines working on the molecular scale. (from  Condensed matter physics- ) 
 
- Image 29- The ancient Greek mathematician  Archimedes- , developer of ideas regarding  fluid mechanics-  and  buoyancy- . (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 30Albert Einstein-  (1879–1955), ca. 1905 (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 34Star maps-  by the 11th century Chinese  polymath Su Song-  are the oldest known  woodblock-printed-  star maps to have survived to the present day. This example, dated 1092, employs the cylindrical equirectangular projection- . (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 38Max Planck-  (1858–1947) (from  History of physics- ) 
 
- Image 39- A  magnet levitating-  above a  high-temperature superconductor- . Today some physicists are working to understand high-temperature superconductivity using the AdS/CFT correspondence. (from  Condensed matter physics- ) 
 
- Image 40Classical physics-  is usually concerned with everyday conditions: speeds are much lower than the  speed of light- , sizes are much greater than that of atoms, yet very small in astronomical terms. Modern physics, however, is concerned with high velocities, small distances, and very large energies. (from  Modern physics- ) 
 
- Image 41- Image of X-ray diffraction pattern from a  protein-  crystal (from  Condensed matter physics- ) 
 
- Image 43- Sir Isaac Newton (1642–1727) (from  History of physics- ) 
 
  
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