Borelli, Giovanni Alfonso, De motionibus naturalibus a gravitate pendentibus, 1670

Table of figures

< >
[Figure 141]
[Figure 142]
[Figure 143]
[Figure 144]
[Figure 145]
[Figure 146]
[Figure 147]
[Figure 148]
[Figure 149]
[Figure 150]
[Figure 151]
[Figure 152]
[Figure 153]
[Figure 154]
[Figure 155]
[Figure 156]
[Figure 157]
[Figure 158]
[Figure 159]
[Figure 160]
[Figure 161]
[Figure 162]
[Figure 163]
[Figure 164]
[Figure 165]
[Figure 166]
[Figure 167]
[Figure 168]
[Figure 169]
[Figure 170]
< >
page |< < of 579 > >|
1
ſibi mutuò congruent, & proindè nulla ratio ſuadet
vt guttulæ ipſæ, & conſequen tèr aſſiculæ lateralitèr
moueantur, cùm earum neutra
142[Figure 142]
vim motiuam habeat horizon­
talem
, propterea quòd ſi mo­
uerentur horizonti æquidiſtan­
ter
non magis, quam priùs cen­
tro grauium approximarentur,
neque mos eſt naturæ fruſtrà
operari.
Cap. 9. de
corpuſculo­
rum innatan­
tium
mutuo
amplexu at­
que fuga.
Fiat deindè contactus guttularum lateralis, ſcili­
cèt ſuperficies ſiniſtra AB, ſupremæ pendulæ guttu­
læ tangat ſuperficiem dextram GH inferioris guttu­
læ, tunc efficietur contactus, & ſuperficierum con­
gruentia, non in vnico puncto ſicuti configuratio ea­
rum tumida, & conuexa requireret, ſed in ſatis ſen­
ſibili ſpatio veluti eſt IK, & hìc efficitur adhæſio, &
congruentia inter duas aqueas partes non minori te­
nacitate, quam duæ laminæ vitreæ ſuperiùs expoſitæ
ſe ſe mutuò nectebantur, itaque difficile diuelluntur
prædictæ aquæ vna ab altera, ſed facillimè poteſt v­
na ſuperficies ſuper alteram excurrere, vt aquæ flu­
xibilitas requirit, igitur quia prædictæ guttulæ effi­
ciunt contactum IK obliquum, & decliuem versùs
centrum telluris, neceſsè eſt vt guttula inferior gra­
uis FGH exerceat natiuam ſuam vim deſcenſiuam̨
eo modo quo poteſt, & ideò dilabetur, fluetque de­
orsùm ſemper tamen ſuperiori guttulæ adhærendo,
& hoc eò vſque fiet, quouſque ad infimum ſitum de-

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index