3 Laws of Motion.
3 Laws of Motion.
3 Laws of Motion.
The law of inertia was first formulated by Galileo Galilei for horizontal
motion on Earth and was later generalized by René Descartes. Although the
principle of inertia is the starting point and the fundamental assumption of
classical mechanics, it is less than intuitively obvious to the untrained eye.
In Aristotelian mechanics and in ordinary experience, objects that are not
being pushed tend to come to rest. The law of inertia was deduced by
Galileo from his experiments with balls rolling down inclined planes.
For Galileo, the principle of inertia was fundamental to his central scientific
task: he had to explain how is it possible that if Earth is really spinning on
its axis and orbiting the Sun, we do not sense that motion. The principle of
inertia helps to provide the answer: since we are in motion together with
Earth and our natural tendency is to retain that motion, Earth appears to us
to be at rest. Thus, the principle of inertia, far from being a statement of the
obvious, was once a central issue of scientific contention. By the time
Newton had sorted out all the details, it was possible to accurately account
for the small deviations from this picture caused by the fact that the motion
of Earth’s surface is not uniform motion in a straight line (the effects of
rotational motion are discussed below). In the Newtonian formulation, the
common observation that bodies that are not pushed tend to come to rest is
attributed to the fact that they have unbalanced forces acting on them, such
as friction and air resistance.
Newton’s second law: F = ma