Who s going to tell us about Newton s background?

Updated on military 2024-03-05
7 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    On Christmas Eve, Newton was born in a peasant family in Walthorpe, Lincolnshire, England. Newton was a premature baby, weighing only 3 pounds at birth. Both the midwife and his parents were worried about whether he would survive.

    No one could have imagined that this seemingly insignificant little thing would become a giant of science that would rise to the age of 85.

    2. Newton's father died three months before he was born. When he was two years old, his mother remarried. Newton was raised by his maternal grandmother.

    When he was 11 years old, his mother's step-husband died, and Newton returned to his mother. Beginning at about the age of 5, Newton was sent to public school and entered secondary school at the age of 12.

    3. Newton was not a child prodigy when he was a teenager, he had ordinary qualifications and average grades, but he liked to read, and liked to read some books that introduced various simple mechanical model making methods, and was inspired to make some strange gadgets by himself, such as windmills, wooden clocks, folding lanterns, and so on.

    4. A windmill was being built near the apothecary's house, and Newton made a small windmill himself after understanding the mechanics of the windmill. It is not the wind that drives his windmill, but the animals. He tied the mouse to a treadmill with wheels, and placed a grain of corn in front of the wheel, just in a place where the mouse could not reach.

    The rat wanted to eat the corn, so it kept running, so the wheel kept turning. He also made a small water clock. Every morning, the little water will automatically drip water onto his face, urging him to get out of bed.

    5. Later, forced to live, his mother asked Newton to suspend school and work in the family farm. But Newton was not interested in farming, and buried himself in books whenever he had the opportunity. Every time his mother asked him to go to the market with her servant to familiarize himself with the trade, he begged the servant to go out into the street alone while he hid behind a bush and read.

    6. Once, when Newton's uncle became suspicious, he followed Newton to the town, and he found his nephew lying on the grass with his legs outstretched, concentrating on a mathematical problem. Newton's studious spirit moved his uncle, who persuaded his mother to let Newton return to school. Newton went back to school, hungry for the nourishment of his books.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Sir Isaac Newton (January 4, 1643 – March 31, 1727), President of the Royal Society, a famous British physicist, an encyclopedic "all-rounder", the author of "Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy" and "Optics".

    In his 1687 book The Laws of Nature, he described gravitation and the three laws of motion. These descriptions laid the foundation for the scientific view of the physical world for the next three centuries and became the basis of modern engineering. By demonstrating the consistency between Kepler's laws of planetary motion and his theory of gravity, he showed that the motion of terrestrial objects and celestial bodies follows the same laws of nature; It provided strong theoretical support for the heliocentric theory and promoted the scientific revolution.

    In mechanics, Newton clarified the principle of conservation of momentum and angular momentum and proposed Newton's laws of motion. Optically, he invented the reflecting telescope and developed a theory of color based on the observation that a prism diverges white light into the visible spectrum. He also systematically formulated the law of cooling and studied the speed of sound.

    In mathematics, Newton shared the honor of developing calculus with Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. He also proved the generalized binomial theorem, proposed the "Newtonian method" to approximate the zero point of a function, and contributed to the study of power series. In economics, Newton proposed the gold standard.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Sir Isaac Newton was the greatest and most influential scientist in human history, as well as a physicist, mathematician and philosopher, who in his later years became fascinated by alchemy and theology. In his monumental work "The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy", published on July 5, 1687, he mathematically expounded the most basic laws of the universe - the law of universal gravitation and the three laws of motion. These four laws formed a unified system and were considered "the greatest achievement in the history of human intelligence", thus laying the foundation for the scientific outlook of physics for the next three centuries and becoming the foundation of modern engineering.

    Newton established the banner of "rationalism" for mankind and opened the door to the Industrial Revolution. Newton was buried in Westminster Abbey after his death, becoming the first scientist to be buried here.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Full name (Isaac. Newton), a famous British physicist, mathematician, and astronomer, inadvertently landed an apple on his head, and then kept studying experiments, and spent nearly 20 years inventing the great "law of gravitation"!

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Newton was an English physicist, mathematician (the founder of calculus), philosopher,,, and the greatest scientist in the history of human civilization.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Scientists, there are Newton's laws.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Physicist. I've heard of Newton's laws

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