登陆注册
4615700000036

第36章 ISAAC NEWTON.(6)

It then occurred to Newton, that though the moon is at a distance of two hundred and forty thousand miles from the earth, yet the attractive power of the earth must extend to the moon. He was particularly led to think of the moon in this connection, not only because the moon is so much closer to the earth than are any other celestial bodies, but also because the moon is an appendage to the earth, always revolving around it. The moon is certainly attracted to the earth, and yet the moon does not fall down; how is this to be accounted for? The explanation was to be found in the character of the moon's present motion. If the moon were left for a moment at rest, there can be no doubt that the attraction of the earth would begin to draw the lunar globe in towards our globe. In the course of a few days our satellite would come down on the earth with a most fearful crash. This catastrophe is averted by the circumstance that the moon has a movement of revolution around the earth. Newton was able to calculate from the known laws of mechanics, which he had himself been mainly instrumental in discovering, what the attractive power of the earth must be, so that the moon shall move precisely as we find it to move. It then appeared that the very power which makes an apple fall at the earth's surface is the power which guides the moon in its orbit.

[PLATE: SIR ISAAC NEWTON'S TELESCOPE.]

1

It was at this point that the great laws of Kepler became especially significant. Kepler had shown how each of the planets revolves in an ellipse around the sun, which is situated on one of the foci. This discovery had been arrived at from the interpretation of observations. Kepler had himself assigned no reason why the orbit of a planet should be an ellipse rather than any other of the infinite number of closed curves which might be traced around the sun. Kepler had also shown, and here again he was merely deducing the results from observation, that when the movements of two planets were compared together, the squares of the periodic times in which each planet revolved were proportional to the cubes of their mean distances from the sun. This also Kepler merely knew to be true as a fact, he gave no demonstration of the reason why nature should have adopted this particular relation between the distance and the periodic time rather than any other. Then, too, there was the law by which Kepler with unparalleled ingenuity, explained the way in which the velocity of a planet varies at the different points of its track, when he showed how the line drawn from the sun to the planet described equal areas around the sun in equal times. These were the materials with which Newton set to work. He proposed to infer from these the actual laws regulating the force by which the sun guides the planets. Here it was that his sublime mathematical genius came into play. Step by step Newton advanced until he had completely accounted for all the phenomena.

In the first place, he showed that as the planet describes equal areas in equal times about the sun, the attractive force which the sun exerts upon it must necessarily be directed in a straight line towards the sun itself. He also demonstrated the converse truth, that whatever be the nature of the force which emanated from a sun, yet so long as that force was directed through the sun's centre, any body which revolved around it must describe equal areas in equal times, and this it must do, whatever be the actual character of the law according to which the intensity of the force varies at different parts of the planet's journey. Thus the first advance was taken in the exposition of the scheme of the universe.

The next step was to determine the law according to which the force thus proved to reside in the sun varied with the distance of the planet. Newton presently showed by a most superb effort of mathematical reasoning, that if the orbit of a planet were an ellipse and if the sun were at one of the foci of that ellipse, the intensity of the attractive force must vary inversely as the square of the planet's distance. If the law had any other expression than the inverse square of the distance, then the orbit which the planet must follow would not be an ellipse; or if an ellipse, it would, at all events, not have the sun in the focus. Hence he was able to show from Kepler's laws alone that the force which guided the planets was an attractive power emanating from the sun, and that the intensity of this attractive power varied with the inverse square of the distance between the two bodies.

These circumstances being known, it was then easy to show that the last of Kepler's three laws must necessarily follow. If a number of planets were revolving around the sun, then supposing the materials of all these bodies were equally affected by gravitation, it can be demonstrated that the square of the periodic time in which each planet completes its orbit is proportional to the cube of the greatest diameter in that orbit.

[PLATE: SIR ISAAC NEWTON'S ASTROLABE.]

同类推荐
  • 解迷显智成悲十明论

    解迷显智成悲十明论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 念昔游三首

    念昔游三首

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 北郭集

    北郭集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 元始上真众仙记 枕中书

    元始上真众仙记 枕中书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Buttercup Gold and Other Stories

    Buttercup Gold and Other Stories

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 去朋友家的路上

    去朋友家的路上

    儿童性侵阴影下的孤独挣扎,禁锢一生的心灵之伤。孤独的童年,变调的童话,令读者心碎而难忘的文学杰作。昨天,今天,明天,他几乎总是孤单一人。他走在去朋友家的路上,走向人生破碎的那一刻。他叫维格沃特,十一岁。家里的气氛沉重,生病的母亲情绪反复无常,动不动就光火,父亲则是个典型的和事佬。在一个昏暗的冬日下午,他出外到一个朋友家去,黑暗中“可乐人”的眼睛盯住了他。这一天,改变了他的一生。三十多年以后,一头筋疲力尽的大象横卧在奥斯陆郊外的一条马路上,只有维格沃特知道这大象来自何方。
  • 末世与新生

    末世与新生

    “这么美丽的小东西,以后就叫你‘毁灭’吧。”阿倍尔小心的把手里的东西放回到特制的盒子里……蓝海星的星球上,法理看着他脚下的这一片土地.说道:“这么美的景色,这么好的空气,被阿倍尔大人瞧上真是这个星球的灾难,可惜了。”幸存者基地里,谢晗被气得浑身发抖指着桌面上的东西。对着在座的几位大佬说道:“不错,我们修塔纳星系的蓝海星,是比不上他们凯纳星系的亚伦星球。可那也不是他来坑害我们蓝海星人的理由!”……………………
  •  前妻求再嫁

    前妻求再嫁

    两年前,他在她性命垂危之际,选择留在另一个女人身边。两年后,他看到那个改头换脸的妻子,震惊得无以复加。是谁说执子之手,与子偕老,却在中途松了我的手。这是一场单行线的婚姻,在我伸手的同时,你却放开了,现在你想用力捉紧,而我却不在了……温暖篇:当某男终于千辛万苦地让某女接受了他求婚,便迫不及待地建议:“早点将婚结了。”“不要!”某女想也没想就拒绝。“戒指都接受了,不能不嫁啊!”某男着急提醒。“不是不嫁,而是晚点嫁。”某女笑眯眯地答。“再晚点,人老珠黄了。”某男纠结了。“没关系,你比我更老。”某女笑着指出了事实。某男一听,气势短了一截:“好吧,我都已经这么老了,你还要我等吗?”
  • 皇明纪略

    皇明纪略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 世界上最伟大的推销员

    世界上最伟大的推销员

    这本书改变了乔·古拉德与原一平的人生,同样也将会改变你的命运。一经问世销量迅即突破100万,被18个国家引进传阅,全球销量最大的成功励志书之一。
  • 地府头条:判官今天嫁了吗?

    地府头条:判官今天嫁了吗?

    他是东海龙宫的太子,她是阎罗殿里的女判官,左右都是搭不上边。偏偏奈何桥上一面,误了终生。收拾恶鬼斗公主,历劫百年不离弃。且看貌美皮厚女判官,如何拿下傲娇怕鬼龙太子!最波荡的出生最幸运的人,最不幸难,我命由我不由天!
  • 微型小说一千零一夜(第一卷)

    微型小说一千零一夜(第一卷)

    本书中的每一篇小说都是一个贴近生活的精彩故事,反映着当代生活的广阔图景。它们不仅能教会你如何理解生活,更能教会你如何热爱生活。开阔读者的视野、启迪读者的心智、使读者得到精神享受,是编者编选此书的最大愿望。
  • 大神不笑也倾城

    大神不笑也倾城

    网游爱好者慕斯冉平生三大爱好就是玩游戏赏美男赏游戏中的美男。凭着先天机智的大脑外加后天完美的手法便把榜上榜中的大神擒拿到手。不过明明说好了是游戏恋爱,怎么变成了实现恋爱?还有大神你与我难道还有着其他纷乱之缘?当小白女神...精被腹黑男神圈住之后真的可以为所欲为还是被任所欲为?一一献给古今中外所有你爱我比我爱你多一点点的人儿。
  • 魂战万界

    魂战万界

    数不尽的位面,为了争夺上位资格,展开厮杀。神魔,野兽,人类,不同的文化,不同的立场。看主角入侵万界,掠夺资源,一战到底!………………新书求支持
  • 成天上树的日子

    成天上树的日子

    《成天上树的日子》是玛格丽特·杜拉斯的短篇小说集,共由四个故事组成:《成天上树的日子》、《蟒蛇》、《道丹太太》和《工地》。《成天上树的日子》讲述一位年迈的母亲去看望居住在巴黎的儿子,描写了“母爱”这种特殊、永恒的爱,偏重于叙事,张力十足;《蟒蛇》中主人公回忆她还是小姑娘时,每周日都不得不接连观看两个场景,巨蟒吞噬活鸡,和遗恨吞噬七旬老人巴尔贝小姐,这两个场景平行展开,互为补充,引发思考……