Newton, Isaac, Philosophia naturalis principia mathematica, 1713

Table of figures

< >
[Figure 161]
[Figure 162]
[Figure 163]
[Figure 164]
[Figure 165]
[Figure 166]
[Figure 167]
[Figure 168]
[Figure 169]
[Figure 170]
[Figure 171]
[Figure 172]
[Figure 173]
[Figure 174]
[Figure 175]
[Figure 176]
[Figure 177]
[Figure 178]
[Figure 179]
[Figure 180]
[Figure 181]
[Figure 182]
[Figure 183]
[Figure 184]
[Figure 185]
[Figure 186]
[Figure 187]
[Figure 188]
[Figure 189]
[Figure 190]
< >
page |< < of 524 > >|
1res abſolutæ AC, IC, KC, LC,&c. erunt in progreſſione Geo­
metrica. Q.E.D.Et ſimili argumento, in aſcenſu corporis, ſu­
mendo, ad contrariam partem puncti A,æquales areas ABmi,
imnk, knol,&c.
conſtabit quod vires abſolutæ AC, iC, kC, lC,&c.
ſunt continue proportionales. Ideoque ſi ſpatia omnia in aſcenſu &
deſcenſu capiantur æqualia; omnes vires abſolutæ lC, kC, iC, AC,
IC, KC, LC,&c.
erunt continue proportionales. Q.E.D.
DE MOTU
CORPORUM
151[Figure 151]
Corol.1. Hinc ſi ſpatium deſcriptum exponatur per aream Hy­
perbolicam ABNK; exponi poſſunt vis gravitatis, velocitas cor­
poris & reſiſtentia Medii per lineas AC, AP& AKreſpective;
& vice verſa.
Corol.2. Et velocitatis maximæ, quam corpus in infinitum deſcen­
dendo poteſt unquam acquirere, exponens eſt linea AC.
Corol.3. Igitur ſi in data aliqua velocitate cognoſcatur reſiſten­
tia Medii, invenietur velocitas maxima, ſumendo ipſam ad veloci-

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index