Title: NewtonGalileo
1Sir Isaac Newton and Galileo
By Kristen Newtrom, Kristy Rodriguez, Trevor
Lowe.
2Table of Contents
- Title
- Table of Contents
- Sir Isaac Newton.
- More Newton
- Galileo
- More Galileo
- What Galileo had to do with Isaac Newton
- Laws
- Bibliography
- The End
3 Sir Isaac Newton
- Sir Isaac Newton was born January 4,1642, in
Lincolnshire, England. - Two months before his birth his father died.
- His mother remarried when he was only three years
old and he went to live with he grand parents. - He was not interested in the family farm, so he
was sent to Cambridge University to study, and
thats where got interested in Galileo's
discovery. - Sir Isaac Newton was a mathematician and
physicist, one of the foremost scientific
intellects of all time . - He died on March 31,1727, Newton never married
and had few close friends in a relatively long
life. (He died at age 84)
4More Isaac Newton
- Isaac Newton thought the world worked like a
machine and that a few simple laws governed it.
Like Galileo, he realized that mathematics was
the way to explain and prove those laws. Isaac
Newton was one of the worlds great scientists
because he took his ideas, and the ideas of
earlier scientists, and combined them into a
unified picture of how the universe works. - Isaac Newton explained the formulated laws
of motion, and gravitation. These laws are math
formulas that explain how objects move when a
force acts on them. Isaac published his most
famous book, in 1687 called Principia, while he
was a mathematics professor at Trinity College,
Cambridge. Principia, explained the three laws
that govern the way objects move. The three laws
are often called Newton's laws. He then described
his idea, or theory, about gravity. Gravity is
the force that causes things to fall down.
5Galileo
- Galileo was born in Pisa, Italy on February 15
1564, and was the first of six children. He was
born the day Michelangelo died. - At the age of 8, his family moved to Florence,
but he was left with Jacopo Borghini for two
years. - He then was educated in the Camaldolese
Monastery at Vallombrosa, 35Â km southeast of
Florence. Although he seriously considered the
priesthood as a young man, he enrolled for a
medical degree at the University of Pisa at his
father's urging. He did not complete this degree,
but instead studied mathematics. In 1589, he was
appointed to the chair of mathematics in Pisa. In
1591 his father died and he was entrusted with
the care of his younger brother Michelangelo. - Galileo fathered three children out of wedlock
with Marina Gamba. They had two daughters,
Virginia in 1600 and Livia in 1601, and one son,
Vincenzo, in 1606. - Galileo lived for seventy seven years and died on
January 8, 1642.
6More Galileo
- At age twenty, Galileo noticed a lamp swinging
overhead while he was in a cathedral. Curious to
find out how long it took the lamp to swing back
and forth, he used his pulse to time large and
small swings. Galileo discovered something that
no one else had ever realized the period of each
swing was exactly the same. The law of the
pendulum, which would eventually be used to
regulate clocks, made Galileo instantly famous.
- . At age eleven, Galileo was sent off to study in
a Jesuit monastery. - After four years, Galileo had announced to his
father that he wanted to be a monk. Galileo was
hastily with drawn from the monastery. In 1581,
at the age of 17, he entered the University of
Pisa to study medicine, as his father wished. - Except for mathematics, Galileo was bored with
Pisa university. Galileo's family was informed
that their son was in danger of flunking out. A
compromise was worked out, where Galileo would be
tutored full-time in mathematics by the
mathematician of the Tuscan court.
- It seemed as Galileo was going to finish college
and get his education , how ever Galileo left
the university before he got his degree. - He then started tutoring students in mathematics.
He did some experiments with floating objects,
developing a balance.
7What Galileo had to do with Isaac Newton
Aristotle believed that objects descended because
that area was the most suitable area for that
object to fall). Later Galileo disagreed with
Aristotles theory and believed that all objects
descended at the same speed. No matter how much
an object weighed it accelerated at the same
speed and the only thing that made objects differ
was the air resistance. Galileos work could once
again be improved by experimentation. His
observations of the apple enabled Newton to make
generalizations about the laws of motion. The
three laws of universal motion explained the
characteristics of any force on an object.
Galileo influenced Newton by leaving theories on
the differences between darkness and light, the
center of the universe, and the motions of
gravity. Though not all of Newtons work was
focused on Galileos unfinished theories, many of
Newtons works were finishing Galileos
unfinished theories. Galileo and Newton remain
some of the worlds greatest scientists. They
both improved on the ideas which their
predecessors had believed in before. Galileo and
Newtons theories continue to be used today.
8laws
- An object at rest will remain at rest unless
acted on by an unbalanced force. An object in
motion continues in motion with the same speed
and in the same direction unless acted upon by an
unbalanced force. This law is often - called "the law of inertia".
2. Acceleration is produced when a force acts on
a mass. The greater the mass (of the object being
accelerated) the greater the amount of force
needed (to accelerate the object).
3. For every action there is an equal and
opposite re-action.
9Laws in our own words
- Objects need a unbalanced force to move a
nonmoving object because objects resist change in
motion. - The more mass the object has the more force
required to move it. - When there is two objects colliding there is an
equal force and a opposite force.
10Application for each law
- When I'm jumping on the trampolines the gravity
will bring us back down. - My car broke down and I'm trying to get back to
the house and need more force to push it than I
have. - The rockets thrust pushed it off the ground
because the ground put and equal force.
11First law activity
Book work
- Discuss with the students the material in the
Science Concept section and Teacher Text. Make
sure that the students have a limited
understanding of Newton's First Law of Motion.
The students can do this experiment on their own
after you demonstrate to them what to do. Place a
book on a sheet of paper. Then jerk the paper
suddenly. (The book doesn't move). The
explanation of why the book doesn't move is under
the Overview section. - Have the students break up into teams of two and
repeat the experiment on their own. - After each student has had an opportunity to do
the experiment, have a discussion together as a
class as to what has occurred. - Ask the middle grade students to write a short
paragraph on what has happened and how Newton's
First Law of Motion is a play in this experiment
12Second law activity
Roly-poly
- Go over with the children the material under the
Teachers Text in a general manner according to
their ability level. Then begin the experiment
First spread a thin layer of baby powder over the
surface of the cookie sheet. - Place the cookie sheet on the floor.
- Raise one end of the cookie sheet and rest it on
the rim of the coffee can. - Secure the cookie sheet to the can with tape.
- Put the water and 10 drops of food coloring in
the cup. Stir. - Fill the eyedropper with colored water.
- Practice squeezing drops of colored water back
into the cup until you can easily squeeze one
drop at a time. - Sitting next to the raised end of the powdered
cookie sheet, hold the eyedropper just above, but
not touching, the raised end of the cookie sheet.
- Squeeze out 1 drop of colored water and watch it
roll down the powdered cookie sheet. It will
become covered with powder and form a round
rolling object that we'll call a roly-poly. - Squeeze out another drop of colored water and
watch it roll down the cookie sheet. If it
follows the path of the first roly-poly, they
will either stack on top of each other at the
bottom of the cookie sheet or collide and join to
form a single, larger roly-poly. - Repeat the experiment twice, asking a helper to
raise the end of the cookie sheet, first to a
height of about 9 inches above the floor, and
then to a height of about 12 inches. - Discuss as a class what has happened and how
Newton's Second Law of Motion.
13third law activity
Roll away
- Discuss with the students the material under
Science Concept and Teacher Text in this section.
Make sure that each child has at least some
understanding of how Newton's Third Law of Motion
works before doing the experiment. (In this way
the children will have a greater awareness of
what is taking place when they actually do the
experiment with the skates and basketball.)
Proceed outside and talk about safety first in
doing the experiment. Make sure that the students
understand that they will not push anyone on
skates, etc. - Pair the students up and explain what they will
be doing during the experiment. (Each student
will have their own turn). The student will roll
backward with their roller skates. Then, the
student will toss a basketball hard. The ball
goes one way, and as you push the ball away, you
move away in the opposite direction. - After the students have finished taking a turn
with the basketball while on their skates, return
to the classroom and discuss what they have
experienced. - Ask the older students to write a short paper on
what they experienced and how Newton's Third Law
of Motion was at work during their experiment.
14bibliography
- http//inventors.about.com/od/gstartinventors/a/Ga
lileo_Galilei.htm (information on Newton) - http//www.uni.edu/schneidj/webquests/spring04/mad
scientists/isaacnewton.html (sir Isaac Newton's
picture) - http//teachertech.rice.edu/Participants/louviere/
Newton/law3.html (laws) - http//inventors.about.com/od/gstartinventors/a/Ga
lileo_Galilei.htm (Galileo's life) - www.sikeston.k12.mo.us/gwilliams/newtonwebquest.ht
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The end!
By KristenNewstrom, Kristy Rodriguez,
Trevor lowe.