It really depends on your opinions, and what you're future career will end up being. Take physics if your more into math and technology.
Chemistry does more with physics than chemistry does with chemistry. in English, it just does........................... ;)
alchemy is better than chemistry although chemistry is fun to do
Definatly physics. I am a collage major. And believe me, it helps to have both.
contribution of chemistry to physics
It depends on what you mean. If you mean "more likely to fail chemistry and physics than to fail mathematics", then the answer is presumably yes. If you mean "more likely to fail chemistry and physics than some bozo who can't figure out how this 'multiplication' thing works", then no. In physics and (most kinds of) chemistry, a solid understanding of mathematics can only be helpful.
Yes, math is more closely applicable to physics, chemistry, and engineering, than biology and programming are.
Radioactivity is a concept rooted in physics rather than chemistry. It involves the spontaneous decay of atomic nuclei, leading to the emission of radiation such as alpha, beta, or gamma particles. While radioactivity has implications in various fields including chemistry, its fundamental principles are based on nuclear physics.
Mathematics is applied to physics and chemistry.
Physics
There certainly is both physical chemistry (the application of physics techniques to chemistry) and chemical physics (the study of chemical processes from the point of view of physics). See Wikipedia for a fuller answer.
If by "mature" is meant completely grown or a science having reached its apex, then neither chemistry nor physics have stopped growing. They both are important sciences. Chemistry is the only science which can actually *change* one molecule into another. Physics, these days, deals mostly with sub-atomic particles. We need both chemistry and physics. Chemistry has contributed the most to civilization, but physics has made some significant advances also.
Chemistry and physics are both branches of natural sciences.