The study of physics is concerned with what the universe is made of, and how these things move and interact with each other. Physicists are constantly striving to find the most fundamental ideas that can be used to describe the most complex of phenomena. Developing a physics theory in the first place is just as much a creative process as composing music. Experimental physicists have to be enormously creative in coming up with methods of testing theories and measuring things in the world around them. You will gain a new appreciation of the world around you. You can look at a rainbow and say "Wow, pretty colours!", or you can marvel at the amazing interactions between photons and electrons that come together in that particular way when light from the sun strikes spherical water droplets in the sky, which you perceive as a multi-coloured arc suspended in the air.
Six GCSEs at Grade 6 or above PLUS: Grade 7 or above in GCSE Maths AND EITHER: Grade 77 or above in GCSE Double Science OR 7 or above in GCSE Physics
About Education Provider
| Region | East Midlands |
| Local Authority | Leicester |
| Ofsted Rating | |
| Gender Type | Girls |
| ISI Report | View Report |
| Boarding Fee | Unknown |
| Sixth Form Fee | £10,695 - £14,460 |
| Address | 454 London Road, Leicester, LE2 2PP |
The study of physics is concerned with what the universe is made of, and how these things move and interact with each other. Physicists are constantly striving to find the most fundamental ideas that can be used to describe the most complex of phenomena. Developing a physics theory in the first place is just as much a creative process as composing music. Experimental physicists have to be enormously creative in coming up with methods of testing theories and measuring things in the world around them. You will gain a new appreciation of the world around you. You can look at a rainbow and say "Wow, pretty colours!", or you can marvel at the amazing interactions between photons and electrons that come together in that particular way when light from the sun strikes spherical water droplets in the sky, which you perceive as a multi-coloured arc suspended in the air.
Six GCSEs at Grade 6 or above PLUS: Grade 7 or above in GCSE Maths AND EITHER: Grade 77 or above in GCSE Double Science OR 7 or above in GCSE Physics