Salusbury, Thomas, Mathematical collections and translations (Tome I), 1667

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1Velocity encreaſed in the manner aforeſaid would be equal to the
Space
that the ſaid Moveable would paſſe, in caſe it were in the
ſame
Time A C, moved with an Uniform Motion, whoſe degree of
Velocity
ſhould be equal to E C, the half of B C.
I now proceed
farther
, and imagine the Moveable; having deſcended with an
Accelerate Motion, to have in the Inſtant
C
the degree of Velocity B C: It is ma­
85[Figure 85]
nifeſt
, that if it did continue to move
with
the ſame degree of Velocity B C,
without
farther Acceleration, it would
paſſe
in the following Time C I, a Space
double
to that which it paſſed in the equal
Time
A C, with the degree of Uniform
Velocity
E C, the half of the Degree B C.
But becauſe the Moveable deſcendeth
with
a Velocity encreaſed alwaies Uni­
formly
in all equal Times; it will add to
the
degree C B in the following Time
C
I, thoſe Tame Moments of Velocity
that
encreaſe according to the Parallels of
the
Triangle B F G, equal to the Triangle
A B C. So that adding to the degree of
Velocity
G I, the half of the degree F G, the greateſt of thoſe ac­
quired
in the Accelerate Motion, and regulated by the Parallels of
the
Triangle B F G, we ſhall have the degree of Velocity I N, with
which
, with an Uniform Motion, it would have moved in the
Time
C I: Which degree I N, being triple the degree E C, pro­
veth
that the Space paſſed in the ſecond Time C I ought to be tri­
ple
to that of the firſt Time C A. And if we ſhould ſuppoſe to be
added
to A I another equal part of Time I O, and the Triangle to
be
enlarged unto A P O; it is manifeſt, that if the Motion ſhould
continue
for all the Time I O with the degree of Velocity I F,
acquired
in the Accelerate Motion in the Time A I, that degree
I
F being Quadruple to E C, the Space paſſed would be Quadruple
to
that paſſed in the equal firſt Time A C: But continuing the
encreaſe
of the Uniform Acceleration in the Triangle F P Q like
to
that of the Triangle A B C, which being reduced to equable
Motion
addeth the degree equal to E C, Q R being added, equal
to
E C, we ſhall have the whole Equable Velocity exerciſed in the
Time
I O, quintuple to the Equable Velocity of the firſt Time A C,
and
therefore the Space paſſed quintuple to that paſt in the firſt
Time
A C. We ſee therefore, even by this familiar computation,
That
the Spaces paſſed in equal Times by a Moveable which
departing
from Reſt goeth acquiring Velocity, according to the
encreaſe
of the Time, are to one another as the odd Numbers ab

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