Jump to content

Timeline of classical mechanics

From Niidae Wiki
Revision as of 19:07, 3 April 2025 by imported>WikiEditor50 (Clean up)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Template:Short description

Template:Classical mechanics The following is a timeline of the history of classical mechanics:

Antiquity

[edit]

Early mechanics

[edit]


(cf. Abel B. Franco (October 2003). "Avempace, Projectile Motion, and Impetus Theory", Journal of the History of Ideas 64 (4), p. 521-546 [543]: "Pines has also seen Avempace's idea of fatigue as a precursor to the Leibnizian idea of force which, according to him, underlies Newton's third law of motion and the concept of the "reaction" of forces.")</ref>


(cf. Abel B. Franco (October 2003). "Avempace, Projectile Motion, and Impetus Theory", Journal of the History of Ideas 64 (4), p. 521-546 [528]: Hibat Allah Abu'l-Barakat al-Bagdadi (c.1080- after 1164/65) extrapolated the theory for the case of falling bodies in an original way in his Kitab al-Mu'tabar (The Book of that Which is Established through Personal Reflection). [...] This idea is, according to Pines, "the oldest negation of Aristotle's fundamental dynamic law [namely, that a constant force produces a uniform motion]," and is thus an "anticipation in a vague fashion of the fundamental law of classical mechanics [namely, that a force applied continuously produces acceleration].")</ref>

  • 1340–1358 – Jean Buridan develops the theory of impetus
  • 14th century – Oxford Calculators and French collaborators prove the mean speed theorem
  • 14th century – Nicole Oresme derives the times-squared law for uniformly accelerated change.<ref>Clagett (1968, p. 561), Nicole Oresme and the Medieval Geometry of Qualities and Motions; a treatise on the uniformity and difformity of intensities known as Tractatus de configurationibus qualitatum et motuum. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press. Template:ISBN.</ref> Oresme, however, regarded this discovery as a purely intellectual exercise having no relevance to the description of any natural phenomena, and consequently failed to recognise any connection with the motion of accelerating bodies<ref>Grant, 1996, p.103.</ref>
  • 1500–1528 – Al-Birjandi develops the theory of "circular inertia" to explain Earth's rotation<ref name="Ragep">F. Jamil Ragep (2001), "Tusi and Copernicus: The Earth's Motion in Context", Science in Context 14 (1–2), p. 145–163. Cambridge University Press.</ref>
  • 16th century – Francesco Beato and Luca Ghini experimentally contradict Aristotelian view on free fall.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • 16th century – Domingo de Soto suggests that bodies falling through a homogeneous medium are uniformly accelerated.<ref>Sharratt, Michael (1994). Galileo: Decisive Innovator. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Template:ISBN, p. 198</ref><ref>Wallace, William A. (2004). Domingo de Soto and the Early Galileo. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing. Template:ISBN (pp. II 384, II 400, III 272)</ref> Soto, however, did not anticipate many of the qualifications and refinements contained in Galileo's theory of falling bodies. He did not, for instance, recognise, as Galileo did, that a body would fall with a strictly uniform acceleration only in a vacuum, and that it would otherwise eventually reach a uniform terminal velocity
  • 1581 – Galileo Galilei notices the timekeeping property of the pendulum
  • 1589 – Galileo Galilei uses balls rolling on inclined planes to show that different weights fall with the same acceleration
  • 1638 – Galileo Galilei publishes Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences (which were materials science and kinematics) where he develops, amongst other things, Galilean transformation
  • 1644 – René Descartes suggests an early form of the law of conservation of momentum
  • 1645 – Ismaël Bullialdus argues that "gravity" weakens as the inverse square of the distance<ref>Ismail Bullialdus, Astronomia Philolaica … (Paris, France: Piget, 1645), page 23.</ref>
  • 1651 – Giovanni Battista Riccioli and Francesco Maria Grimaldi discover the Coriolis effect
  • 1658 – Christiaan Huygens experimentally discovers that balls placed anywhere inside an inverted cycloid reach the lowest point of the cycloid in the same time and thereby experimentally shows that the cycloid is the tautochrone
  • 1668 – John Wallis suggests the law of conservation of momentum
  • 1673 – Christiaan Huygens publishes his Horologium Oscillatorium. Huygens describes in this work the first two laws of motion.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The book is also the first modern treatise in which a physical problem (the accelerated motion of a falling body) is idealized by a set of parameters and then analyzed mathematically.
  • 1676–1689 – Gottfried Leibniz develops the concept of vis viva, a limited theory of conservation of energy
  • 1677 – Baruch Spinoza puts forward a primitive notion of Newton's first law

Newtonian mechanics

[edit]

Analytical mechanics

[edit]

Modern developments

[edit]

References

[edit]

Template:Reflist Template:History of physics