A History of MechanicsRoutledge & Paul, 1957 - 671 стор. |
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Сторінка 97
... fall from F to G was more " tardy tardy " than the fall from C to E. He concludes , " then this argument is general - that the further the weights are from the end , or the line fall of along the straight line or the oblique , that is ...
... fall from F to G was more " tardy tardy " than the fall from C to E. He concludes , " then this argument is general - that the further the weights are from the end , or the line fall of along the straight line or the oblique , that is ...
Сторінка 138
... fall of bodies was uniformly accelerated . He submitted the fall of a body on an inclined plane to an experiment which was , for the time , per- formed in a scrupulous manner and repeated a hundred times . shall quote this essential ...
... fall of bodies was uniformly accelerated . He submitted the fall of a body on an inclined plane to an experiment which was , for the time , per- formed in a scrupulous manner and repeated a hundred times . shall quote this essential ...
Сторінка 185
... falling along CB . This establishes the proposition . Huyghens shows that the durations of fall have the same relation to each other as the lengths of the planes . He also shows that when the body falls in a continuous motion from a ...
... falling along CB . This establishes the proposition . Huyghens shows that the durations of fall have the same relation to each other as the lengths of the planes . He also shows that when the body falls in a continuous motion from a ...
Зміст
Nicholas Copernicus 14721543 His system of the world | 5 |
The priority of Herman and Euler in the matter of dAlemberts | 6 |
Transformation of Maxwells equations including convection | 11 |
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able acceleration according action appears applied assumed become body called carried cause centre of gravity Century classical complete concept concerned condition connection considered constant continuous corresponding Descartes determined direction distance dynamics Earth effect energy equal equations equilibrium Euler example existence experiment expressed fact fall field fluid function Galileo given hand Huyghens hypothesis ideas impact impetus inclined increases Lagrange length lever light living forces mass matter means measure mechanics motion moving natural necessary observation obtained original particle physical plane position possible principle problem produced proportional Proposition quantity quantum quantum mechanics reference relation relative remains remarked represented resistance respect rest result sense shows simple solution space special relativity starts statics supposed surface taken theory travelled true velocity wave weight World writes