newton’s laws raymond flood gresham professor of geometry

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Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

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Page 1: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Newton’s Laws

Raymond FloodGresham Professor of

Geometry

Page 2: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Nature and Nature’s laws lay hid in Night.God said, Let Newton be! and All was light

Isaac Newton 1642–1727

Page 3: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Newton’s memorial in Westminster Abbey

Page 4: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Newton’s Memorial Inscription

Here is buried Isaac Newton, Knight, who by a strength of mind almost divine, and mathematical principles peculiarly his own, explored the course and figures of the planets, the paths of comets, the tides of the sea, the dissimilarities in rays of light, and, what no other scholar has previously imagined, the properties of the colours thus produced.  Diligent, sagacious and faithful, in his expositions of nature, antiquity and the holy Scriptures, he vindicated by his philosophy the majesty of God mighty and good, and expressed the simplicity of the Gospel in his manners.Mortals rejoice that there has existed such and so great an ornament of the human race! 

Page 5: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Boys on the front of the sarcophagus

Page 6: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Memorial above the Sarcophagus

Page 7: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Date Age Event1642 Birth of Isaac Newton

1655 12 Attends Grantham Grammar School

1661 18 Goes up to Trinity College, Cambridge

1665 22 Jan: Graduates Bachelor of Arts at CambridgeAug: Moves back to Lincolnshire because of the plague

1667 24 Return to Cambridge, elected Fellow of Trinity

1669 26 Elected Lucasian Professor of Mathematics

1672 29 Elected Fellow of the Royal Society

1684 41 Halley’s visit leads to preparation of Principia

1687 44 Publication of Principia

1689 46 Member of Parliament for Cambridge University

1693 50 Mental breakdown

1696 53 Moves to London as Warden of the Mint

1700 57 Master of the Mint

1703 60 Elected President of the Royal Society

1704 61 Publication of Opticks

1705 62 Knighted by Queen Anne

1727 84 Death of Isaac Newton

Page 8: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Date Age Event1642 Birth of Isaac Newton

1655 12 Attends Grantham Grammar School

Woolsthorpe Manor, near Grantham. Lincolnshire— the birthplace of Isaac Newton.

The Free Grammar School of King Edward VI, Grantham, where Newton was a pupil.

Page 9: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Date Age Event1642 Birth of Isaac Newton

1655 12 Attends Grantham Grammar School

1661 18 Goes up to Trinity College, Cambridge

1665 22 Jan: Graduates Bachelor of Arts at CambridgeAug: Moves back to Lincolnshire because of the plague

1667 24 Return to Cambridge, elected Fellow of Trinity

1669 26 Elected Lucasian Professor of Mathematics

1672 29 Elected Fellow of the Royal Society

1684 41 Halley’s visit leads to preparation of Principia

1687 44 Publication of Principia

1689 46 Member of Parliament for Cambridge University

1693 50 Mental breakdown

1696 53 Moves to London as Warden of the Mint

1700 57 Master of the Mint

1703 60 Elected President of the Royal Society

1704 61 Publication of Opticks

1705 62 Knighted by Queen Anne

1727 84 Death of Isaac Newton

Page 10: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Date Age Event1642 Birth of Isaac Newton

1655 12 Attends Grantham Grammar School

1661 18 Goes up to Trinity College, Cambridge

1665 22 Jan: Graduates Bachelor of Arts at CambridgeAug: Moves back to Lincolnshire because of the plague

Trinity College, Cambridge in about 1690

Page 11: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Date Age Event1642 Birth of Isaac Newton

1655 12 Attends Grantham Grammar School

1661 18 Goes up to Trinity College, Cambridge

1665 22 Jan: Graduates Bachelor of Arts at CambridgeAug: Moves back to Lincolnshire because of the plague

1667 24 Return to Cambridge, elected Fellow of Trinity

1669 26 Elected Lucasian Professor of Mathematics

1672 29 Elected Fellow of the Royal Society

1684 41 Halley’s visit leads to preparation of Principia

1687 44 Publication of Principia

1689 46 Member of Parliament for Cambridge University

1693 50 Mental breakdown

1696 53 Moves to London as Warden of the Mint

1700 57 Master of the Mint

1703 60 Elected President of the Royal Society

1704 61 Publication of Opticks

1705 62 Knighted by Queen Anne

1727 84 Death of Isaac Newton

Page 12: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

In the beginning of the year 1665 I found the Method of approximating series & the Rule for reducing any dignity of any Binomial into such a series. The same year in May I found the method of Tangents of Gregory and Slusius, & in November had the direct method of fluxions & the next year in January had the Theory of Colours & in May following I had entrance into ye inverse method of fluxions.

Plague Years

Page 13: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

And the same year I began to think of gravity extending to ye orb of the Moon & ... I deduced that the forces wch keep the Planets in their Orbs must [be] reciprocally as the squares of their distances from the centres about wch they revolve: & thereby compared the force requisite to keep the Moon in her Orb with the force of gravity at the surface of the earth, & found them answer pretty nearly.

Plague Years

Page 14: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

All this was in the two plague years of 1665—1666. For in those days I was in the prime of my age for invention & minded Mathematicks & Philosophy more than at any time since.

Plague Years

Page 15: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Analysis by infinite seriesManuscript page, 1665

Page 16: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Close up of manuscript page

Page 17: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Date Age Event1642 Birth of Isaac Newton

1655 12 Attends Grantham Grammar School

1661 18 Goes up to Trinity College, Cambridge

1665 22 Jan: Graduates Bachelor of Arts at CambridgeAug: Moves back to Lincolnshire because of the plague

1667 24 Return to Cambridge, elected Fellow of Trinity

1669 26 Elected Lucasian Professor of Mathematics

1672 29 Elected Fellow of the Royal Society

1684 41 Halley’s visit leads to preparation of Principia

1687 44 Publication of Principia

1689 46 Member of Parliament for Cambridge University

1693 50 Mental breakdown

1696 53 Moves to London as Warden of the Mint

1700 57 Master of the Mint

1703 60 Elected President of the Royal Society

1704 61 Publication of Opticks

1705 62 Knighted by Queen Anne

1727 84 Death of Isaac Newton

Page 18: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

1667 24 Return to Cambridge, elected Fellow of Trinity

1669 26 Elected Lucasian Professor of Mathematics

1672 29 Elected Fellow of the Royal Society

1684 41 Halley’s visit leads to preparation of Principia

1687 44 Publication of Principia

1689 46 Member of Parliament for Cambridge University

1693 50 Mental breakdown

Page 19: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Date Age Event1642 Birth of Isaac Newton

1655 12 Attends Grantham Grammar School

1661 18 Goes up to Trinity College, Cambridge

1665 22 Jan: Graduates Bachelor of Arts at CambridgeAug: Moves back to Lincolnshire because of the plague

1667 24 Return to Cambridge, elected Fellow of Trinity

1669 26 Elected Lucasian Professor of Mathematics

1672 29 Elected Fellow of the Royal Society

1684 41 Halley’s visit leads to preparation of Principia

1687 44 Publication of Principia

1689 46 Member of Parliament for Cambridge University

1693 50 Mental breakdown

1696 53 Moves to London as Warden of the Mint

1700 57 Master of the Mint

1703 60 Elected President of the Royal Society

1704 61 Publication of Opticks

1705 62 Knighted by Queen Anne

1727 84 Death of Isaac Newton

Page 20: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

1696 53 Moves to London as Warden of the Mint

1700 57 Master of the Mint

1703 60 Elected President of the Royal Society

1704 61 Publication of Opticks

1705 62 Knighted by Queen Anne

1727 84 Death of Isaac Newton

The Tower of London (where the Mint was situated), 1707. When Newton became Warden of the Mint, he lived at first in the tower.

Page 21: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Halley visits NewtonDr [Halley] asked him what he thought the Curve would be that would be described by the Planets supposing the force of attraction towards the Sun to be reciprocal to the square of their distance from it. Sr Isaac replied immediately that it would be an Ellipsis, the Doctor struck with joy & amazement asked him how he knew it, why saith he I have calculated it, whereupon Dr Halley asked him for his calculation without any farther delay, Sr Isaac looked among his papers but could not find it, but he promised him to renew it, & then to send it him.

Page 22: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry
Page 23: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Newton’s Three laws of Motion

1. Every Body perseveres in its state of rest or of moving uniformly straight forward, except insofar as it is compelled to change its state by forces impressed.

2. A change in motion is proportional to the motive force impressed and takes place along the straight line in which that force is impressed.

3. To any action there is always an opposite and equal reaction.

Page 24: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Newton’s cradle

Page 25: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry
Page 26: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Law of Universal Gravitation

The gravitational attraction between two masses varies directly as the product of the masses and inversely as the square of the distance separating them.

Page 27: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

A Treatise of the System of the World, 1728

Available on Goggle books: http://tinyurl.com/ngl2ow6

Page 28: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

From Newton’s A Treatise of the System of the World,

1728

Page 29: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Equal areas in equal times – Kepler’s second law

This states that the line joining a planet to the Sun sweeps out equal areas in equal times – essentially this is a way of quantifying the idea that planets move faster when near the Sun and slower when at the extremities of their orbits.

Page 30: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Book 1 Proposition 1 Theorem 1The areas, which revolving bodies describe by radii drawn to an immovable centre of

force do lie in the same immovable planes, and are proportional to the times in which

they are described.

Page 31: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Equal areas in equal times

Page 32: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Equal areas in equal times

Page 33: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Equal areas in equal times

Page 34: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Equal areas in equal times

Page 35: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Equal areas in equal times

Page 36: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Equal areas in equal times

Page 37: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Prove: area SAB = area SBC

Page 38: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

area SAB = area SBc and area SBC = area SBc

so area SAB = area SBC

Page 39: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

area SAB = area SBc

Page 40: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

area SBC = area SBc

Page 41: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

area SAB = area SBc and area SBC = area SBc

so area SAB = area SBC

Page 42: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

area SAB = area SBc and area SBC = area SBc

so area SAB = area SBC

Page 43: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Inverse square law

Problem:Given the shape of the orbit, an ellipse, and the fixed centre towards which the force responsible for the shape of that orbit points, how does the magnitude of that force vary with the distance of that force from the centre?Answer:The force must obey an inverse square law.

Page 44: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Is the Solar System Stable?

King Oscar II, his son Gustav, grandson Gustav-Adolf and

great-grandson Prince Gustav-Adolf

Given a system of arbitrarily many mass points that attract each according to Newton’s law, under the assumption that no two points ever collide, try to find a representation of the coordinates of each point as a series in a variable that is some known function of time and for all of whose values the series converges uniformly

Page 45: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Henri Poincaré 1854 -1912

Page 46: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Qualitative behaviour of solutions

• Solution is a path in a multidimensional space – phase space

Henri Poincaré 1854 -1912

Page 47: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Phase space and Poincaré section

Amended from Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1999

Page 48: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

Qualitative behaviour of solutions

• Solution is a path in a multidimensional space – phase space

• Poincaré section• Periodic tells us

system is stable• Quasiperiodic• Chaotic

Henri Poincaré 1854 -1912

Page 49: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

• Simulated evolution of the solar system over 5 Gyr

• 2501 different scenarios• Slight change in the

starting conditions e.g. move Mercury by 1 metre

• one per cent of the solutions lead to a large increase in Mercury’s eccentricity—an increase large enough to allow collisions with Venus or the Sun.

• in one of these high-eccentricity solutions, a subsequent decrease in Mercury’s eccentricity induces a transfer of angular momentum from the giant planets that destabilizes all the terrestrial planets about 3.34 Gyr from now, with possible collisions of Mercury, Mars or Venus with the Earth

Page 50: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

So is the solar system stable?

See Chapter 8 Orbital ChaosThree-body Problem

Page 51: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

So is the solar system stable?

Probably not!But we won’t be around to find out.

See Chapter 8 Orbital ChaosThree-body Problem

Page 52: Newton’s Laws Raymond Flood Gresham Professor of Geometry

1 pm on Tuesdays Museum of London