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3.3 Isaac Newton

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3.3 ISAAC NEWTON Isaac Newton (1642-1727) Born in the same year of Galileo s death. Orphan since birth. Newton was born three months after the death of his father ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 3.3 Isaac Newton


1
3.3 Isaac Newton
2
Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
  • Born in the same year of Galileos death.
  • Orphan since birth. Newton was born three months
    after the death of his father
  • Grew up with his grandmother.
  • he was a small child his said that he could have
    fit inside a quart mug ( 1.1 litres).
  • he never married, being highly engrossed in his
    studies and work.

3
Bio
  • At the age of 18, his mother attempted to make a
    farmer of him.
  • In 1661, he was admitted in Trinity College,
    Cambridge as a sizar.
  • He read the books of Copernicus, Kepler
    Galileo.
  • 1669, he became a professor of mathematics.
  • (1670-1672) he taught Optics.
  • 1687, he returned back to mechanics.
  • 1704, back to calculus.

4
Bio
  • Newton was also a member of the Parliament of
    England from 1689 to 1690 and in 1701, but
    according to some accounts his only comments were
    to complain about a cold draught in the chamber
    and request that the window be closed.
  • In 1696, Newton moved to London to take up the
    post of warden of the Royal Mint.
  • 1701, retired from Cambridge.
  • Newton was made President of the Royal Society in
    1703 and an associate of the French Academy of
    Sciences.

5
Bio
  • n April 1705, Queen Anne knighted Newton during a
    royal visit to Trinity College, Cambridge.
  • 1717, Newton moved the Pound Sterling de
    facto from the silver standard to the gold
    standard.
  • Newton died in his sleep in London on 31 March
    1727.
  • After his death, Newton's body was discovered to
    have had massive amounts of mercury in it.
  • Mercury poisoning could explain Newton's
    eccentricity in late life.

6
Mathematics
  • In 1704, developed infinitesimal calculus.
    (Leibniz 1684)
  • Newton is generally credited with
  • the generalised binomial theorem, valid for any
    exponent.
  • He discovered Newton's identities, Newton's
    method
  • classified cubic plane curves (polynomials of
    degree three in two variables)
  • made substantial contributions to the theory
    of finite differences
  • was the first to use fractional indices
  • He approximated partial sums of the harmonic
    series by logarithms 
  • was the first to use power series with confidence
    and to revert power series.

7
Optics (1670-1672)
  • he observed that color is the result of objects
    interacting with already-colored light rather
    than objects generating the color themselves.
    This is known as Newton's theory of color.

8
Components of visible light
  • Isaac Newton showed that by shining white light
    through a glass prism it could be separated back
    into its different wavelengths.
  • and that a lens and a second prism could
    recompose the multicolored spectrum into white
    light.
  • Newtons color disk

9
Reflection Telescope
  • In 1668, he was able to produce the
    first reflecting telescope.
  • It is known as Newtonian Telescope.
  • It has many advantages compared to the refracting
    telescope.

10
Universality of gravity
  • In 1687, returned back to work on Mechanics.
  • What makes an apple falls down, is responsible
    for keeping the moon in orbit.
  • The moon is always falling toward Earth.
  • The moon moves forward in space, at the same
    time.
  • It constantly, misses the Earth.

11
Weightlessness
  • More than 200 years later, his ideas were put in
    action.

12
Universal Law of Gravity
  • This law works all over the universe.
  • G was determined experimentally by Cavendish in
    1797-1798

13
Newtons Laws of Motion (1687)
  • The Law of Inertia
  • In the absence of external forces, when viewed
    from an inertial reference frame, an object at
    rest remains at rest and an object in motion
    continues in motion with a constant velocity
    (that is, with a constant speed in a straight
    line).

14
Newtons 2nd Law
  • the acceleration of an object is directly
    proportional to the net force acting on it and
    inversely proportional to its mass.

15
Newtons 3rd Law
  • If two objects interact, the force F12 exerted by
    object 1 on object 2 is equal in magnitude and
    opposite in direction to the force F21 exerted by
    object 2 on object 1.
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