Isaac Newton



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 Isaac Newton

 

 

Michael Fowler,  Physics Dept., U.Va. 



Newton’s Life  

In 1642, the year Galileo died

Isaac Newton

 was born in Woolsthorpe, Lincolnshire, 

England on Christmas Day.  His father had died three months earlier, and baby Isaac, 

very premature, was also not expected to survive.  It was said he could be fitted into a 

quart pot.  When Isaac was three, his mother married a wealthy elderly clergyman from 

the next village, and went to live there, leaving Isaac behind with his grandmother.  The 

clergyman died, and Isaac’s mother came back, after eight years, bringing with her three 

small children.  Two years later, Newton went away to the Grammar School in 

Grantham, where he lodged with the local apothecary, and was fascinated by the 

chemicals.  The plan was that at age seventeen he would come home and look after the 

farm.  He turned out to be a total failure as a farmer.   

His mother’s brother, a clergyman who had been an undergraduate at Cambridge, 

persuaded his mother that it would be better for Isaac to go to university, so in 1661 he 

went up to Trinity College, Cambridge.  Isaac paid his way through college for the first 

three years by waiting tables and cleaning rooms for the fellows (faculty) and the 

wealthier students.  In 1664, he was elected a scholar, guaranteeing four years of 

financial support.  Unfortunately, at that time the plague was spreading across Europe, 

and reached Cambridge in the summer of 1665.  The university closed, and Newton 

returned home, where he spent two years concentrating on problems in mathematics and 

physics.  He wrote later that during this time he first understood the theory of gravitation, 

which we shall discuss below, and the theory of optics (he was the first to realize that 

white light is made up of the colors of the rainbow), and much mathematics, both integral 

and differential calculus and infinite series.  However, he was always reluctant to publish 

anything, at least until it appeared someone else might get credit for what he had found 

earlier.   

On returning to Cambridge in 1667, he began to work on alchemy, but then in 1668 

Nicolas Mercator published a book containing some methods for dealing with infinite 

series.  Newton immediately wrote a treatise, De Analysi, expounding his own wider 

ranging results.  His friend and mentor Isaac Barrow communicated these discoveries to a 

London mathematician, but only after some weeks would Newton allow his name to be 

given.  This brought his work to the attention of the mathematics community for the first 

time.  Shortly afterwards, Barrow resigned his Lucasian Professorship (which had been 




 

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established only in 1663, with Barrow the first incumbent) at Cambridge so that Newton 



could have the Chair.   

Newton’s first major public scientific achievement was the invention, design and 

construction of a reflecting telescope.  He ground the mirror, built the tube, and even 

made his own tools for the job.  This was a real advance in telescope technology, and 

ensured his election to membership in the Royal Society.  The mirror gave a sharper 

image than was possible with a large lens because a lens focusses different colors at 

slightly different distances, an effect called chromatic aberration.  This problem is 

minimized nowadays by using compound lenses, two lenses of different kinds of glass 

stuck together, that err in opposite directions, and thus tend to cancel each other’s 

shortcomings, but mirrors are still used in large telescopes.   

Later in the 1670’s, Newton became very interested in theology.  He studied Hebrew 

scholarship and ancient and modern theologians at great length, and became convinced 

that Christianity had departed from the original teachings of Christ.  He felt unable to 

accept the current beliefs of the Church of England, which was unfortunate because he 

was required as a Fellow of Trinity College to take holy orders.  Happily, the Church of 

England was more flexible than Galileo had found the Catholic Church in these matters, 

and King Charles II issued a royal decree excusing Newton from the necessity of taking 

holy orders! Actually, to prevent this being a wide precedent, the decree specified that, in 

perpetuity, the Lucasian professor need not take holy orders.  (The current Lucasian 

professor is Stephen Hawking.)  

In 1684, three members of the Royal Society, Sir Christopher Wren, Robert Hooke and 

Edmond Halley, argued as to whether the elliptical orbits of the planets could result from 

a gravitational force towards the sun proportional to the inverse square of the distance.  

Halley writes:  



Mr.  Hook said he had had it, but that he would conceal it for some time so that others, 

triing and failing might know how to value it, when he should make it publick.   

Halley went up to Cambridge, and put the problem to Newton, who said he had solved it 

four years earlier, but couldn’t find the proof among his papers.  Three months later, he 

sent an improved version of the proof to Halley, and devoted himself full time to 

developing these ideas, culminating in the publication of the Principia in 1686.  This was 

the book that really did change man’s view of the universe, as we shall shortly discuss, 

and its importance was fully appreciated very quickly.  Newton became a public figure.  

He left Cambridge for London, where he was appointed Master of the Mint, a role he 

pursued energetically, as always, including prosecuting counterfeiters.  He was knighted 

by Queen Anne.  He argued with Hooke about who deserved credit for discovering the 

connection between elliptical orbits and the inverse square law until Hooke died in 1703, 

and he argued with a German mathematician and philosopher, Leibniz, about which of 

them invented calculus.  Newton died in 1727, and was buried with much pomp and 

circumstance in Westminster Abbey—despite his well-known reservations about the 

Anglican faith.   



 

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An excellent, readable book is The Life of Isaac Newton, by Richard Westfall, Cambridge 



1993, which I used in writing the above summary of Newton’s life.   

A fascinating collection of articles, profusely illustrated, on Newton’s life, work and 

impact on the general culture is Let Newton Be!, edited by John Fauvel and others, 

Oxford 1988, which I also consulted.   



Projectiles and Planets  

Let us now turn to the central topic of the Principia, the universality of the gravitational 

force.  The legend is that Newton saw an apple fall in his garden in Lincolnshire, thought 

of it in terms of an attractive gravitational force towards the earth, and realized the same 

force might extend as far as the moon.  He was familiar with Galileo’s work on 

projectiles, and suggested that the moon’s motion in orbit could be understood as a 

natural extension of that theory.  To see what is meant by this, consider a gun shooting a 

projectile horizontally from a very high mountain, and imagine using more and more 

powder in successive shots to drive the projectile faster and faster.   

 

The parabolic paths would become flatter and flatter, and, if we imagine that the 



mountain is so high that air resistance can be ignored, and the gun is sufficiently 

powerful, eventually the point of landing is so far away that we must consider the 



curvature of the earth in finding where it lands.   

In fact, the real situation is more dramatic—the earth’s curvature may mean the projectile 



never lands at all.  This was envisioned by Newton in the Principia.  The following 

diagram is from his later popularization, A Treatise of the System of the World, written in 

the 1680’s:  



 

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The mountaintop at V is supposed to be above the earth’s atmosphere, and for a suitable 

initial speed, the projectile orbits the earth in a circular path.  In fact, the earth’s curvature 

is such that the surface falls away below a truly flat horizontal line by about five meters 

in 8,000 meters (five miles).  Recall that five meters is just the vertical distance an 

initially horizontally moving projectile will fall in the first second of motion.  But this 

implies that if the (horizontal) muzzle velocity were 8,000 meters per second, the 

downward fall of the cannonball would be just matched by the earth’s surface falling 

away, and it would never hit the ground! This is just the motion, familiar to us now, of a 

satellite in a low orbit, which travels at about 8,000 meters (five miles) a second, or 

18,000 miles per hour.  (Actually, Newton drew this mountain impossibly high, no doubt 

for clarity of illustration.  A satellite launched horizontally from the top would be far 

above the usual shuttle orbit, and go considerably more slowly than 18,000 miles per 

hour.) 


For an animated version of Newton’s cannon on a mountain

click here





The Moon is Falling 

Newton realized that the moon’s circular path around the earth could be caused in this 

way by the same gravitational force that would hold such a cannonball in low orbit, in 

other words, the same force that causes bodies to fall.   

To think about this idea, let us consider the moon’s motion, beginning at some particular 

instant, as deviating downwards—falling—from some initial “horizontal” line, just as for 




 

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the cannonball shot horizontally from a high mountain.  The first obvious question is: 



does the moon fall five meters below the horizontal line, that is, towards the earth, in the 

first second? This was not difficult for Newton to check, because the path of the moon 

was precisely known by this time.  The moon’s orbit is approximately a circle of radius 

about 384,000 kilometers (240,000 miles), which it goes around in a month (to be 

precise, in 27.3 days), so the distance covered in one second is, conveniently, very close 

to one kilometer.  It is then a matter of geometry to figure out how far the curved path 

falls below a “horizontal” line in one second of flight, and the answer turns out to be not 

five meters, but only a little over one millimeter! (Actually around 1.37 millimeters.) 

It’s completely impossible to draw a diagram showing how far it falls in one second, but 

the geometry is the same if we look how far it falls in one day, so here it is: 

 

The Moon in orbiting the 



Earth goes from A to D in 

one day. Without the 

Earth’s pull, it would have 

gone in a straight line to B.  

 

It has therefore fallen below 



the straight line in one day 

by the distance between D 

and B. 

 

Since we know the radius 



of the orbit, and we know 

how far the Moon travels in 

one day, we can find the 

distance DB using 

Pythagoras’ theorem for the 

triangle CAB, where C is  

the center of the Earth. 

B



D

For one second, AB would be only one kilometer, so since AC is 384,000 km., the 



triangle ABC is really thin, but we can still use Pythagoras’ theorem! 

Thus the “natural acceleration” of the moon towards the earth, measured by how far it 

falls below straight line motion in one second, is less than that of an apple here on earth 

by the ratio of five meters to 1.37 millimeters, which works out to be about 3,600.   

What can be the significance of this much smaller rate of fall? Newton’s answer was that 

the natural acceleration of the moon was much smaller than that of the cannonball 




 

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because they were both caused by a force—a gravitational attraction towards the earth, 



and that the gravitational force became weaker on going away from the earth.   

In fact, the figures we have given about the moon’s orbit enable us to compute how fast 

the gravitational attraction dies away with distance.  The distance from the center of the 

earth to the earth’s surface is about 6,350 kilometers (4,000 miles), so the moon is about 

60 times further from the center of the earth than we and the cannonball are.   

From our discussion of how fast the moon falls below a straight line in one second in its 

orbit, we found that the gravitational acceleration for the moon is down by a factor of 

3,600 from the cannonball’s (or the apple’s).   

Putting these two facts together, and noting that 3,600 = 60 x 60, led Newton to his 

famous inverse square lawthe force of gravitational attraction between two bodies 



decreases with increasing distance between them as the inverse of the square of that 

distance, so if the distance is doubled, the force is down by a factor of four.   

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Document Outline

  • previous   index   next   Isaac Newton
    • Newton’s Life 
    • Projectiles and Planets 
    • The Moon is Falling

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