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3 - Newton's laws of motion and the law of gravitation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2012

R. Douglas Gregory
Affiliation:
University of Manchester
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Summary

KEY FEATURES

The key features of this chapter are Newton's laws of motion, the definitions of mass and force, the law of gravitation, the principle of equivalence, and gravitation by spheres.

This chapter is concerned with the foundations of dynamics and gravitation. Kinematics is concerned purely with geometry of motion, but dynamics seeks to answer the question as to what motion will actually occur when specified forces act on a body. The rules that allow one to make this connection are Newton's laws of motion. These are laws of physics that are founded upon experimental evidence and stand or fall according to the accuracy of their predictions. In fact, Newton's formulation of mechanics has been astonishingly successful in its accuracy and breadth of application, and has survived, essentially intact, for more than three centuries. The same is true for Newton's universal law of gravitation which specifies the forces that all masses exert upon each other.

Taken together, these laws represent virtually the entire foundation of classical mechanics and provide an accurate explanation for a vast range of motions from large molecules to entire galaxies.

NEWTON'S LAWS OF MOTION

Isaac Newton's three famous laws of motion were laid down in Principia, written in Latin and published in 1687. These laws set out the founding principles of mechanics and have survived, essentially unchanged, to the present day. Even when translated into English, Newton's original words are hard to understand, mainly because the terminology of the seventeenth century is now archaic.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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