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Newton's laws of motion (Law)

Sir Isaac Newton's laws of motion were first published in his work Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (1687). The laws form the basis for classical mechanics. Newton used them to explain many results concerning the motion of physical objects. In the third volume of the text, he showed that the laws of motion, combined with his law of universal gravitation, explained Kepler's laws of planetary motion.

The following are brief modern formulations of Newton's three laws of motion:

First law: Objects in motion tend to stay in motion, and objects at rest tend to stay at rest unless an outside force acts upon them.

Second law: The net force on an object is equal to the product of its mass and its acceleration.

$\displaystyle \sum \vec{F} = m \vec{a} $

Third law: To every action (force applied) there is an equal and opposite reaction (equal force applied in the opposite direction).

$\displaystyle \vec{F}_{12} = - \vec{F}_{21} $

This entry is a derivative of the Newton's laws of motion article from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Authors of the orginial article include: DJ Clayworth, Obli, Stevertigo, Patrick and Michael Hardy . History page of the original is here



"Newton's laws of motion" is owned by bloftin.
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See Also: Mathematical structure of physical theories

Other names:  Newton's laws
Also defines:  Netwon's 2nd law, Newton's 1st law, Newton's 3rd law
Keywords:  Newton mechanics

Attachments:
single stage rocket burnout height (Example) by bloftin
frictionless inclined plane (Example) by bloftin
penny falling from Empire State Building (Example) by bloftin
example constant acceleration and speed of sound (Example) by bloftin
constant acceleration problems (Example) by bloftin

Cross-references: acceleration, mass, volume, classical mechanics
There are 15 references to this object.

This is version 4 of Newton's laws of motion, born on 2006-06-17, modified 2009-02-11.
Object id is 186, canonical name is NewtonsLawsOfMotion.
Accessed 7514 times total.

Classification:
Physics Classification45.50.Dd (General motion)
 45.50.Pk (Celestial mechanics )
 45.50.-j (Dynamics and kinematics of a particle and a system of particles)

Pending Errata and Addenda
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Discussion
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Newton a Fake? by goombaloo2001 on 2007-11-06 17:45:55
My Physics teacher told me that he was watching a show that was about Newtons 3 laws and that it said newton wasn't the first to think up his laws but a girl was. Does anyone know what he's talking about?
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