Newton, Isaac, Philosophia naturalis principia mathematica, 1713

Table of figures

< >
[Figure 71]
[Figure 72]
[Figure 73]
[Figure 74]
[Figure 75]
[Figure 76]
[Figure 77]
[Figure 78]
[Figure 79]
[Figure 80]
[Figure 81]
[Figure 82]
[Figure 83]
[Figure 84]
[Figure 85]
[Figure 86]
[Figure 87]
[Figure 88]
[Figure 89]
[Figure 90]
[Figure 91]
[Figure 92]
[Figure 93]
[Figure 94]
[Figure 95]
[Figure 96]
[Figure 97]
[Figure 98]
[Figure 99]
[Figure 100]
< >
page |< < of 524 > >|
1Globi inverſe, & ſubduplicata ratione Vis abſolutæ Globi etiam
inverſe. que E. I.
DE MOTU
CORPORUM
Corol.1. Hinc etiam Oſcillantium, Cadentium & Revolventium
corporum tempora poſſunt inter ſe conferri.
Nam ſi Rotæ, qua Cy­
clois intra globum deſcribitur, diameter conſtituatur æqualis ſemi­
diametro globi, Cyclois evadet Linea recta per centrum globi tran­
ſiens, & Oſcillatio jam erit deſcenſus & ſubſequens aſcenſus in hac
recta.
Unde datur tum tempus deſcenſus de loco quovis ad
centrum, tum tempus huic æquale quo corpus uniformiter cir­
ca centrum globi ad diſtantiam quamvis revolvendo arcum qua­
drantalem deſcribit.
Eſt enim hoc tempus (per Caſum ſecun­
dum) ad tempus ſemioſcillationis in Cycloide quavis QRSut
1 ad √(AR/AC).
Corol.2. Hinc etiam conſectantur quæ Wrennus& Hugeniusde
Cycloide vulgari adinvenerunt.
Nam ſi Globi diameter augeatur
in infinitum: mutabitur ejus ſuperficies ſphærica in planum, Viſque
centripeta aget uniformiter ſecundum lineas huic plano perpendi­
culares, & Cyclois noſtra abibit in Cycloidem vulgi.
Iſto autem
in caſu longitudo arcus Cycloidis, inter planum illud & punctum
deſcribens, æqualis evadet quadruplicato ſinui verſo dimidii arcus
Rotæ inter idem planum & punctum deſcribens; ut invenit Wren­
nus:Et Pendulum inter duas ejuſmodi Cycloides in ſimili & æ­
quali Cycloide temporibus æqualibus Oſcillabitur, ut demonſtravit
Hugenius.Sed & Deſcenſus gravium, tempore Oſcillationis unius,
is erit quem Hugeniusindicavit.
Aptantur autem Propoſitiones a nobis demonſtratæ ad veram
conſtitutionem Terræ, quatenus Rotæ eundo in ejus circulis maxi­
mis deſcribunt motu Clavorum, perimetris ſuis infixorum, Cycloi­
des extra globum; & Pendula inferius in fodinis & cavernis Terra
ſuſpenſa, in Cycloidibus intra globos Oſcillari debent, ut Oſcilla­
tiones omnes evadant Iſochronæ.
Nam Gravitas (ut in Libro
tertio docebitur) decreſcit in progreſſu a ſuperficie Terræ, ſur­
ſum quidem in duplicata ratione diſtantiarum a centro ejus, de
orſum vero in ratione ſimplici.

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index