Newton, Isaac, Philosophia naturalis principia mathematica, 1713

Table of figures

< >
[Figure 21]
[Figure 22]
[Figure 23]
[Figure 24]
[Figure 25]
[Figure 26]
[Figure 27]
[Figure 28]
[Figure 29]
[Figure 30]
[Figure 31]
[Figure 32]
[Figure 33]
[Figure 34]
[Figure 35]
[Figure 36]
[Figure 37]
[Figure 38]
[Figure 39]
[Figure 40]
[Figure 41]
[Figure 42]
[Figure 43]
[Figure 44]
[Figure 45]
[Figure 46]
[Figure 47]
[Figure 48]
[Figure 49]
[Figure 50]
< >
page |< < of 524 > >|
1
PHILOSOPHIÆ
NATURALIS
Principia
MATHEMATICA.
DEFINITIONES.
DEFINITIO I.
Quantitas Materiæ eſt menſura ejuſdem orta ex illius Denſitate &
Magnitudine conjunctim.
AER, denſitate duplicata, in ſpatio etiam duplicato fit qua­
druplus; in triplicato ſextuplus.
Idem intellige de Nive &
Pulveribus per compreſſionem vel liquefactionem conden­
ſatis.
Et par eſt ratio corporum omnium, quæ per cauſas quaſcun­
Q.E.D.verſimode condenſantur.
Medii interea, ſi quod fuerit, in­
terſtitia partium libere pervadentis, hic nullam rationem habeo.

Hanc autem Quantitatem ſub nomine Corporis vel Maſſæ in ſe­
quentibus paſſim intelligo.
Innoteſcit ea per corporis cujuſque
Pondus.
Nam Ponderi proportionalem eſſe reperi per experi­
menta Pendulorum accuratiſſime inſtituta, uti poſthac docebitur.
DEFINITIO II.
Quantitas Motus eſt menſura ejuſdem orta ex Velocitate & Quan­
titate Materiæ conjunctim.
Motus totius eſt ſumma motuum in partibus ſingulis; adeoque
in corpore duplo majore æquali cum velocitate duplus eſt, & du­
pla cum velocitate quadruplus.

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index