| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| General Theory of Relativity. | Albert Einstein | 90%
|
| Discovery of polonium and radium. | Marie Curie | 81%
|
| Classical mechanics. | Isaac Newton | 79%
|
| Uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics. | Werner Heisenberg | 79%
|
| Electromagnetic theory. | James Clerk Maxwell | 76%
|
| Laws of planetary motion. | Johannes Kepler | 76%
|
| Discovery of atomic nucleus. | Ernest Rutherford | 71%
|
| Law of electromagnetic induction. | Michael Faraday | 71%
|
| Model of the hydrogen atom where the negatively charged electron confined to an atomic shell encircles a small, positively charged atomic nucleus and where an electron jump between orbits is accompanied by an emitted or absorbed amount of electromagnetic energy. | Neils Bohr | 71%
|
| First use of a telescope to systematically observe celestial objects and record discoveries. | Galileo Galilei | 69%
|
| Geometric mathematical model of the universe that placed the Sun rather than the Earth at the center of the universe. | Nicolaus Copernicus | 69%
|
| Modern alternating current electricity supply system. | Nikola Tesla | 67%
|
| In quantum field theory, diagrams that help interactions to be conveniently visualized. | Richard Feynman | 67%
|
| Prediction of the black-body radiation released by black holes, due to quantum effects near the event horizon. | Stephen Hawking | 67%
|
| Description of the buoyant force that is exerted on a body immersed in a fluid. | Archimedes | 64%
|
| Exclusion principle of fermions. | Wolfgang Pauli | 64%
|
| Wave mechanics in quantum theory. | Erwin Schrodinger | 62%
|
| Demonstration of the first self-sustaining Nuclear chain reaction. | Enrico Fermi | 57%
|
| Circuit laws (dealing with current and voltage). | Gustav Kirchoff | 57%
|
| First electric battery. | Allesandro Volta | 55%
|
| Law that describes the force interacting between static electrically charged particles. | Charles-Augustin de Coulomb | 55%
|
| Experimental gas law that describes how the pressure of a gas tends to increase as the volume of the container decreases. | Robert Boyle | 55%
|
| Explanation about black-body radiation with the development of a law that was a pioneering result of quantum theory. | Max Planck | 52%
|
| Relativistic wave equation that describes the behavior of fermions and predicts the existence of antimatter. | Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac | 52%
|
| Law of elasticity. | Robert Hooke | 50%
|
| Discovery of radioactivity. | Henri Becquerel | 48%
|
| Long-distance radio transmission. | Guglielmo Marconi | 45%
|
| Derivation of transformation equations which forms the basis of the special relativity theory. | Hendrik Lorentz | 45%
|
| Prediction of a fundamental field of crucial importance to particle physics theory that explains why some fundamental particles have mass when, based on the symmetries controlling their interactions, they should be massless. | Peter Higgs | 45%
|
| Discovery of the neutron. | James Chadwick | 43%
|
| Circuital law that relates the integrated magnetic field around a closed loop to the electric current passing through the loop. | Andre-Marie Ampere | 40%
|
| First great reformulation of classical mechanics. | Joseph-Louis Lagrange | 40%
|
| Transport equation that describes the statistical behavior of a thermodynamic system not in a state of equilibrium. | Ludwig Boltzmann | 38%
|
| Law relating the distribution of electric charge to the resulting electric field. | Carl Friedrich Gauss | 36%
|
| Principle that states that an increase in the speed of a fluid occurs simultaneously with a decrease in pressure or a decrease in the fluid's potential energy. | Daniel Bernoulli | 36%
|
| Formulation of the standard interpretation of the probability density function in quantum mechanics. | Max Born | 36%
|
| First mathematical theory of light (a wave theory). | Christiaan Huygens | 33%
|
| Proof of existence of electromagnetic waves. | Heinrich Hertz | 33%
|
| First proposal of the wave of natural electrons. | Louis de Broglie | 33%
|
| Identification of the electron. | Joseph John Thompson | 31%
|
| Measurement of the electron's charge (together with Harvey Fletcher). | Robert Andrews Millikan | 29%
|
| Theorem that states that every differentiable symmetry of the action of a physical system has a corresponding conservation law. | Amalie Emmy Nother | 26%
|
| Introduction of the quark, independently of George Zweig. | Murray Gell-Mann | 26%
|
| Principle of least action. | William Rowan Hamilton | 26%
|
| In thermodynamics, formulation of the laws which deal with the transfer of energy. | James Prescott Joule | 17%
|
| First explicit statement of the First Law of Thermodynamics. | Rudolph Clausius | 17%
|
| First formulation of the second law of thermodynamics. | Sadi Carnot | 17%
|
| Effect that demonstrates the particle nature of electromagnetic radiation. | Arthur Compton | 10%
|
| Equation that describes the motion of viscous fluid substances (together with Claude-Louis Navier). | George Strokes | 10%
|
| Determination of the approximate value of the lower limit to temperature (absolute zero). | William Thompson, 1st Baron Kelvin | 7%
|
| Introduction of azimuthal and spin quantum numbers. | Arnold Sommerfield | 5%
|
| Explanation that vision occurs when light bounces on an object and then is directed to one's eyes. | Hasan Haytham | 2%
|