Examples of science analogies


Analogy is a device commonly used to make something unfamiliar seem familiar by suggesting it is somewhat like something that is already familiar. The idea or phenomenon being introduced or explained is called the target, and the familiar comparison an analogue.

An analogy goes further than simply suggesting one thing is like another (simile) but includes some degree of 'mapping' between the target and analogue.

Read about analogy in science and science teaching


This page presents examples of analogies for science concepts from sources such as the writings of scientists, popular science books and science journalism.

A document listing a wide range of examples of science analogies, similes, metaphors and the like, drawn from diverse sources, can be downloaded using this link: 'Creative Comparisons: Making Science Familiar through Language. An illustrative catalogue of figurative comparisons and analogies for science concepts.'


Examples of analogies

For brevity, many examples are paraphrased or edited – the links lead to the full quotation. Most of these examples


alchemy

anatomy

animal behaviour

anthropology

archaeology

astronomy

see also – solar system


atoms, ions, and molecules

biochemistry

biodiversity

cause and effect

cells

chemical bonding and structure

chemical substances

chemical reactions

computer science

cosmology

development

dynamic equilibria

Earth and geology

ecology

electricity

energy

entropy

evolution

forces

fungi

genetics and inheritance

geology and planetary science

gravitation

heat and thermodynamics

infectious disease and immune system

information and communications technology

kinetic theory

laboratory work /techniques

life


light

mathematical methods

materials

mechanics

medicine

microbes

nutrition

nature of science and scientific methodology

nuclear processes

organisms

periodic table and periodicity

physics

physiology

plants

psychology and mental health

quantum mechanics / theory / systems

radioactivity

reasoning

science teaching

scientists

solar system

see also – astronomy


states of matter and physical change

technology

waves

Further examples may be found here:

Further examples of science analogies


The following examples are discussed elsewhere on the site (follow the links):

The nucleus as the brain of the cell (Bert in Y10)

A duster and matchboxes used to explain spectroscopy (a teacher analogy reported by Amy, college student)

Scaffolding learning as akin to enzymatic catalysis (using catalysis as a comparison to explain 'scaffolding' of learning)

Perceiving and remembering are like palaeontology (a text book analogy to explain cognitive processes)

A black hole with a magnetic field is like a shaggy dog (science news item)

A faecal transplant is like wild flower seeds in some soil (an analogy used in a radio science programme/podcast)

Medical screening is like job-shortlisting (an analogy used in a public science talk / podcast)

Viral infection triggering an immune response is like igniting a fire (an analogy used by a scientist interviewed for the radio)

Effect of a plant toxin is like the valves of a car's engine being stuck open (example from a scientist's blog)

NASA's solar probe entering the Sun's corona is like putting your hand in the oven (analogy used by NASA scientist in media interview)

Working memory is a bit like triglyceride structure (an analogy for explaining 'chunking' to science teachers?)

A well-planned curriculum is like an enzyme (an analogy for thinking about curriculum structure)

Animals and plants are like two different types of engine (a historical analogy)

A synchrotron is like a race track (scientist's comparison used in a public talk)

Photosynthesis as an analogy for the COVID-19 pandemic (used by an academic explaining his work on ther social impacts of the pandemic)

The brain's reward pathway is like a teeter-totter (see-saw) (used by an academic and clinician work on addition)

Popping corn is like radioactive decay (a teaching analogy)

Stars are like trees in a forest, in that you can infer life cycles from observing them at one time (Prof. Martin Rees, Astronomer Royal, talking on the radio – compare with the Herschel analogy below)

A molecular chain reaction is like a Newton's cradle (analogy used to report a scientific study)

An atomic nucleus may behave like a liquid droplet that divides into two smaller droplets (Meitner & Frisch propose nuclear fission in the scientific literature)

The structure of buckminsterfullerene is like a football (Kroto and colleagues report the discovery of a new allotrope of the element carbon)

Mea culpa

And as a teacher, it almost becomes instinctive to use them!

Determining redshift by spectroscopy is a bit like identifying a fingerprint on a balloon that has been stretched.

Nuclear fusion is like cooking rice in that mass may appear to not be conserved.

Children next to a garden fence as an analogy for the photoelectric effect threshold

Learning from one's own teaching analogy: using an analogy from biochemistry to explain what can go wrong in teaching


Note on analogies, similes and metaphors.

In practice the precise demarcations between similes, metaphors (and anthropomorphisms) and analogies may not be absolutely clear. I have tried to follow the rule that if a comparison is set out to make a structural mapping clear (even if this is not spelt out as a mapping: e.g., an atom with its electrons is like a sun with its planets) this counts as an analogy. Where I do not think a comparison is an analogy, but the comparison is made explicit ("…as if…", "…like…": e.g., the atom, like a tiny solar system) I consider this a simile. When the audience is left to spot a comparison (rather than a literal identity) is being made (e.g., the oxygen atom, this tiny solar system) I class this a metaphor.

Anthropomorphism may be seen as a particular kind of metaphor where a metaphorical feature implies a non-human entity has human attributes (e.g., meteors can be impetuous).

I reserve the right to reassign some of these comparisons in due course!


A document listing a wide range of examples of science analogies, similes, metaphors and the like, drawn from diverse sources, can be downloaded using this link: 'Creative Comparisons: Making Science Familiar through Language. An illustrative catalogue of figurative comparisons and analogies for science concepts.'