A Demonstration of Some of the Principal Sections of Sir Isaac Newton's Principles of Natural Philosophy: ... By John Clarke, ...

封面
James and John Knapton, 1730 - 313 頁
 

已選取的頁面

其他版本 - 查看全部

常見字詞

熱門章節

第 15 頁 - ... absolute motion of the body will arise, partly from the true motion of the earth, in immovable space; partly from the relative motion of the ship on the earth; and if the body moves also relatively in the ship its true motion will arise, partly from the true motion of the earth, in immovable space...
第 14 頁 - ... or that part of the cavity which the body fills, and which therefore moves together with the ship: and relative rest is the continuance of the body in the same part of the ship, or of its cavity. But real, absolute rest, is the continuance of the body in the same part of that...
第 24 頁 - ... the true motions of particular bodies from the apparent; because the parts of that immovable space, in which those motions are performed, do by no means come under the observation of our senses. Yet the thing is not altogether desperate; for we have some arguments to guide us, partly from the apparent motions, which are the differences of the true motions; partly from the forces, which are the causes and effects of the true motions.
第 256 頁 - Center, the Squares of their periodical Times are as the Cubes of their...
第 112 頁 - And even in resisting mediums, if the description of the areas is accelerated, the directions of the forces deviate from the point in which the radii meet, towards the parts to which the motion tends.
第 34 頁 - ... oblique plane pG; draw pH, NH, the former perpendicular to the horizon, the latter to the plane pG; and if the force of the weight p tending downwards is represented by the line pH, it may be resolved into the forces pN, HN. If there was any plane pQ, perpendicular to the cord pN, cutting the other plane pG in a line parallel to the horizon, and the weight p was supported only by those planes pQ, pG, it would press those planes perpendicularly with the forces pN, HN; to wit, the plane pQ with...
第 52 頁 - ... point T. Upon which account this velocity may be represented by the chord of the arc TA. For it is a proposition well known to geometers, that the velocity of a pendulous body in the lowest point is as the chord of the arc which it has described in its descent. After reflexion, suppose the body A comes to the place s, and the body B to the place k. Withdraw the body B, and find the place v, from which if the body A, being let go, should after one oscillation return to the place r, st may be a...
第 199 頁 - TPH will be equal, therefore if the Angle RPH be the Complement of the Angle RPS to two right Angles...
第 136 頁 - Kepler, is now received by all astronomers; for the periodic times are the same, and the dimensions of the orbits are the same, whether the sun revolves about the earth, or the earth about the sun. And as to the measures of the periodic times, all astronomers are agreed about them. But for the dimensions of the orbits, Kepler and Bullialdus, above all others, have determined them from observations with the greatest accuracy...
第 14 頁 - ... properly have no quantity, nor are they so much the places themselves, as the properties of places. The motion of the whole is the same...

書目資訊