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Both labs contain some of the wittiest individuals you will ever meet.

a Wet Chemistry lab is quite different from a Physics lab, but then a Nuclear physics laboratory is different from a 'normal' physics lab. I guess a 'high-school' physics lab and chemistry lab are the same. Laboratories tend to be specialised for their purpose.

The only major difference (in the UK, anyway) is that the chemistry lab will have loads of new equipment and money, and the students will sit on golden chairs and write on a ivory table with a diamond pen, whilst the physics lab will be in a cave with little or no lighting and broken, archaic equipment, leaky roof etc.

Well, in this country anyway. And even though a graduate physicist could do the same work as a graduate chemist (and vice verca, I mean no disrespect) the country prefers chemists to physicists. I don't know why.

Incidentally, a high-school physics student could do the work of a graduate biologists, but biology is no-more a science than geography is.

2007-01-08 02:13:29 · answer #1 · answered by Mawkish 4 · 0 0

Physical chemistry lab *is* physics. Chemichal thermodynamics and quantum chemistry experiments are equally at home in some physics labs.

2007-01-08 02:12:53 · answer #2 · answered by Jerry P 6 · 0 0

they're the two canines with 4 legs and a tail. There fairly isn't any similarities that are actually not obtrusive (tail,legs). Pomeranian is extra of somewhat lovable canines it fairly is sturdy for shows and such. Labs are donning canines that are alot greater.

2016-12-15 18:42:31 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The experiments are carefully set up to teast a hypothesis.
Careful notes are taken.
Specialized equipment is used.
Precautions are taken.
Measurements are accurate and hopefully precise.
Results are analysed, and the hypothesis is accepted or rejected on a statistical basis.
The results are reproduceable.

2007-01-08 02:18:23 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

both have ample scope for messing up and learning.in chemistry you mess up with chemicals and in physics lab you can mess up with things 'physically'.

2007-01-08 04:26:05 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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