Isaac Newton



Picture of Isaac Newton
Courtesy of Corbis-Bettmann

Isaac Newton was an English scientist and mathematician who lived between 1642-1727. He had one of the most brilliant minds the world has ever known. Newton developed several laws which help us understand the movement of any object.

Legend has it that seeing an apple fall gave Newton the idea that gravity, which keeps us attatched to the Earth, also controls the motion of planets and stars.


Einstein's Messengers - LIGO Documentary - streaming RealVideo (20 min. 12 sec.) from NSF

Isaac Newton



Picture of Isaac Newton
Courtesy of Corbis-Bettmann

Isaac Newton was an English scientist and mathematician who lived between 1642-1727. He had one of the most brilliant minds the world has ever known. Legend has it that seeing an apple fall gave Newton the idea that gravity, the force which keeps us bound to the Earth, also controls the motion of planets and stars.

Newton's contributions to science include the universal law of gravitation, the development of a whole new field in mathematics called calculus, and his famous three laws of motion.


Einstein's Messengers - LIGO Documentary - streaming RealVideo (20 min. 12 sec.) from NSF

Isaac Newton



Picture of Isaac Newton
Courtesy of Corbis-Bettmann

Isaac Newton was an English scientist and mathematician who lived between 1642-1727. He had one of the most brilliant minds the world has ever known. Legend has it that seeing an apple fall gave Newton the idea that the same force that keeps us bound to the Earth also controls the motion of planets and stars.

Newton's contributions to science include the universal law of gravitation, modern laws of optics, and the development of calculus, a field of mathematics. He is also famous for his book, Principia Mathematica, in which he presents three laws of motion, one of which relates an object's mass and acceleration to the force being applied on it.


Einstein's Messengers - LIGO Documentary - streaming RealVideo (20 min. 12 sec.) from NSF


Last modified May 6, 2008 by Randy Russell.
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