Newtons Projectile, Principia, 1687
by Science Source
Title
Newtons Projectile, Principia, 1687
Artist
Science Source
Medium
Photograph - Photograph
Description
Newton's famous mountain projectile diagram taken from Principia (1687), his treatise on the laws of motion and gravitation. The mountaintop at V is supposed to be above the earth's atmosphere, and for a suitable initial speed, the projectile orbits the earth in a circular path. In fact, the earth's curvature is such that the surface falls away below a truly flat horizontal line by about five meters in 8,000 meters (five miles). Recall that five meters is just the vertical distance an initially horizontally moving projectile will fall in the first second of motion. But this implies that if the (horizontal) muzzle velocity were 8,000 meters per second, the downward fall of the cannonball would be just matched by the earth's surface falling away, and it would never hit the ground! Translation a projectile would never hit the ground if it was launched from high in the Earth's atmosphere with enough initial speed. Instead, it would remain in orbit around the Earth, prevented from flying away by the force of gravity.
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March 7th, 2013
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