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newton
The Newton (symbol: N) is the SI erived unit of force, named after Sir Isaac Newton in recognition of his work on classical mechanics.
Trivia about newton
These chewy Nabisco sookies come in apple & strawberry flavors as well as the ever-popular fig
He wondered if the force that pulled an apple to the ground could also pull the moon into the earth's orbit
This British guy gave us a particle theory of light in 1704, but it's the "apple falling on his head" thing you may remember
N is the symbol for the unit of force named for him
In the 1660s it took a “geneous” like him to show that white light is hetero-geneous
In the shade of apple trees with William Stukeley, he said it was just like when the notion of gravity came to him
In 1727 this physicist became the first scientist buried in Westminster Abbey
This science & math titan moved to 35 St. Martin's Street in London in 1710, 44 years after his "Annus Mirabilis"
Robert Hooke spent lots of time arguing over who made discoveries first, notably with this man over gravitation
His universal law of gravitation explained many things, including the action of tides & the motion of comets
Much of Shaw's play "In Good King Charles's Golden Days" is set in this British scientist's library, in 1680
He discovered the law of universal gravitation as well as a new way to calculate curves
Apple.First law guy.
His experiments in the mid-1660s showed that the colors produced by a prism were due to different refraction rates
He formulated universal laws of gravitation & motion & was the first scientist buried at Westminster Abbey
Conceived around 1686, "G" is known as this man's constant
In addition to his study of gravity, he proved that light contains many colors
His second law, force equals mass times acceleration, is demonstrated when you push a child on a swing
In the 1670s this British genius wrote, "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants"
He was born at Woolsthorpe Manor in 1642; you can still see an apple tree from his bedroom window
This scientist wrote to Robert Hooke, "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants"
A popular cookie shares part of its name with this city that was originally part of Cambridge, Massachusetts
Building on the work of Galileo and Kepler, he published the first quantitative theory of gravitation in 1687
The hero of Neal Stephenson's "Quicksilver" has to settle the calculus dispute between Leibniz & him
Halley asked about the orbit of planets, leading this man to answer with the "Principia Mathematica"
He discovered calculus & formulated the laws of motion
The son of an illiterate yeoman, he'd "gravitate" toward inventing infinitesimal calculus