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Physics: Isaac Newton 33 Views
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Isaac Newton. Who was he? Why do we need to know about him? In a physics course, no less? Well, he's only the most famous physicist in history, and is responsible for the all-important Laws of Motion, which we'll be delving into deeply in this course. So... take off your physics shawl for a sec, and put on your history hat.
Transcript
- 00:28
Isaac Newton physics genius brilliant inventor..weird dude
- 01:33
let's get started.... I want to introduce you to my buddy
- 01:40
Isaac [Apple introducing Isaac Newton]
- 01:46
Isaac Newton....... okay okay Sir Isaac Newton sorry he's a little [Newton watering his plants]
- 01:55
touchy about pretty much everything we're not going to sugarcoat it Isaac
Full Transcript
- 02:01
Newton would have been something of a big annoying rude but he's also one of
- 02:09
the smartest most important physicists mathematicians and inventors the world
- 02:14
has ever known the next few units are going to look at
- 02:18
his laws of motion which are the underpinning of a whole lot of physics [Man rides by on a bicycle]
- 02:23
stuff so we think it's only proper for us to give you a sense of who old Ike
- 02:28
here really was don't worry in a few years when everyone finally acknowledges
- 02:33
your genius we'll do a big biography on you too and we're sure we'll be able to
- 02:38
talk about how sweet and kind you are too but look maybe we're being too hard [Apple discussing isaac newton as a baby]
- 02:42
on Sir Isaac, he didn't have the happiest childhood after all he was born in 1643
- 02:48
in Woolsthorpe which is in jolly old England
- 02:52
his father died before baby Isaac was even born and when Ike was just a
- 02:57
toddler his mother left him with his grandma and married another dude...That [Isaac's mum hands Ike to Grandma and walks away]
- 03:01
action left Isaac with some abandonment issues which makes sense and left him
- 03:06
feeling pretty insecure eventually his mother took him back in and wanted to
- 03:10
make a farmer out of him but Isaac just wasn't cut out for the farming life and
- 03:15
luckily for him and for us his teachers agreed with him they saw how crazy good
- 03:20
he was at math and managed to send him off to college at Cambridge sure he had [Isaac standing outside of Cambridge University]
- 03:24
to wait tables at the college in order to pay his way but that just shows that
- 03:28
even super geniuses have to do work-study programs sometimes in 1665
- 03:34
when Newton was still in college there was the Great Plague of London [People walking around London in the Great Plague]
- 03:39
yike just the phrase Great Plague makes us want to go live in one of those
- 03:43
plastic bubbles it's spread to Cambridge was so bad that they decided to close
- 03:48
half the school for a year and a half you get excited for a snow day but a
- 03:53
year and a half we might actually start to miss going to school consider our [Apple banging on closed sign at school]
- 03:59
minds blown and Isaac must have missed it too
- 04:03
because it was during this period that he started laying the groundwork for
- 04:07
some of his most important work and while he's back on the farm working on [Isaac walking along wasteland farm]
- 04:11
physics all by himself he was sitting under an apple tree when one of the
- 04:15
apples fell and bonked him on the head and that's what inspired him to come up
- 04:20
with his theory of gravity or at least that's the myth... in reality
- 04:24
he just saw an Apple fall and that's what got him thinking, but the story isn't
- 04:28
as good as the whole head bonking thing... embrace your legend I think embraces it
- 04:33
sir Isaac's first major publication was all about optics and along with that
- 04:38
book he invented the reflecting telescope remember when he said he was [Isaac Newton looking through telescope]
- 04:42
super smart yeah we meant he was super smart but some people didn't like all
- 04:47
these new ideas for example Robert Hooke old Bobby H here was a member of the
- 04:54
Royal Society, the Royal Society is basically a bunch of scientists who get
- 04:59
together and talk about science stuff for the benefit of science [Scientists at a table for the Royal Society]
- 05:02
in addition science and science and more science but this club is pretty fancy
- 05:08
pants and not everyone was happy about old farm boy here showing up and showing
- 05:13
off Robert Hooke went after Newton pretty hard and Newton went right back
- 05:19
at him for years they argued at the society and send each other nasty [Newton and Hooke arguing]
- 05:23
letters just think of how epic their Twitter war would have been eventually
- 05:28
newton won a decisive victory by outliving Hooke which is always a winning
- 05:33
ploy but all this arguing wasn't worthless in fact one outcome of the
- 05:38
bickering was Isaac Newton's philosophy a naturalis principia mathematica
- 05:45
which is all mouth full of latin so let's just go with Principia... this [Apple discussing Principia]
- 05:49
book was Newton's most famous work and it introduced his three laws of motion
- 05:54
the Principia made Newton a full-on celebrity
- 05:58
he became a member of parliament and president of the Royal Society in fact [Newton standing in Parliament]
- 06:03
as president he ordered the destruction the only known oil painting of his old
- 06:08
nemesis Robert Hooke yeah Newton could really carry a grudge... in this unit we're
- 06:15
going to be diving deep into each of Newton's three laws but let's take a
- 06:19
quick look at them now Newton's first law of motion says that an object at [First of Newton's laws appears]
- 06:24
rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends to stay in motion
- 06:29
which sounds a lot like our Saturday mornings and our Saturday afternoons so [Boy laying on couch]
- 06:34
basically this law says that all motion or lack thereof will be constant unless
- 06:39
something changes it this is also referred to as the law of inertia
- 06:43
inertia is a property of mass - mass is how much stuff is in a thing sorry if
- 06:49
we're getting too technical here the inertial mass is a measure of an
- 06:52
object's resistance to acceleration the more inertial mass an object has the [Apple trying to push a rock]
- 06:57
harder that object is to move which is something that just makes intuitive
- 07:02
sense after all you can make a ping-pong ball roll just by blowing on it if that
- 07:07
same ball was made of solid lead well you can huff and puff until you pass out
- 07:11
that ball would not be going anywhere and the game of table tennis would get [Man playing table tennis alone]
- 07:16
much more dangerous this law also means that anytime motion changes it's due to
- 07:21
a force acting on whatever is moving or not moving whichever the case may be
- 07:26
basically if an object's motion changes some force is responsible for that
- 07:31
change that force can be friction slowing us down when they put on clean [Girl skidding with socks on the floor]
- 07:35
socks and do some sweet floor slides that force can be gravity after all
- 07:39
without gravity bungee jumping would be like bungee floating or that force can
- 07:45
come from our muscles like when we slink away from the table because old uncle
- 07:49
Greg's talking politics again speaking of forces law numero dos is all about
- 07:54
force it says that a force that's applied to an object is equal to the
- 07:59
object's mass times its acceleration and that little arrows lets us know that
- 08:04
force is a vector because every force is applied in some direction yes away from Uncle [Greg standing by burning barbecue]
- 08:09
Greg counts as a direction we've looked at acceleration in a bunch of our
- 08:13
previous exercises so we know that it's expressed in meters per second squared
- 08:18
and the SI unit for mass is the kilogram so the unit of force is kilograms times
- 08:24
meters over a second squared which doesn't exactly roll off the tongue so
- 08:28
the bigwigs in charge of the whole SI unit system came up with a unit just for [Man standing in a library]
- 08:33
force it's the Newton yep named after Sir Isaac himself like we
- 08:39
said the Newton is made of kilograms and meters and seconds so if we're trying to
- 08:43
determine a force at a t-shirt cannon exerts on a shirt that weighs 200 grams [Girl fires t-shirt cannon at a man]
- 08:48
or the force that a snail exerts when it accelerates at a-blazing 3 inches per
- 08:53
second squared we have to convert everything so that it's using the right
- 08:57
units to match with the units that make up a Newton and of course what makes up
- 09:02
a Newton is fig paste wrapped inside a delicious pastry dough come on
- 09:08
you know we would make at least one fig newton joke
- 09:11
the third law is one that you're probably familiar with already maybe
- 09:14
your mom told it to you when you flicked your little brother's ear and he stomped [Boy flicks brothers ear and stomps on his foot]
- 09:17
on your toe in retaliation every action has an equal and opposite reaction now
- 09:23
this law might sound all deep and philosophical which it is when we're not
- 09:27
talking about physics but guess what we're talking about physics to think of
- 09:31
this law in a physics sense go blow up a balloon and use your own lungs not some [Apple blowing up a balloon]
- 09:36
spare helium tank you have lying around the house now don't tie it off let it go
- 09:40
see how it goes all over the place as the air escapes the balloon pushes the
- 09:45
air out of it neck is that what you call that part of the balloon you know the
- 09:49
air hole blow hole okay we'll stop there anyway the air is being pushed out [Air blowing out of the balloon]
- 09:54
behind the balloon and in reaction to that action the balloon is being pushed
- 09:58
forward okay let's look at some specific examples let's say Isaac wants to get
- 10:03
away from plague town which yeah.. get out while you can buddy so he decides to go
- 10:08
to Iceland why because in addition to being a genius he was born to figure [Isaac figureskating in Iceland]
- 10:12
skate Iceland also pretty far away from oozing
- 10:15
plague filled pustules he laces up his skates, finds a frozen lake and starts
- 10:21
to do his warmups he quickly gets up to a velocity of 12 meters per second and
- 10:26
he has a mass of 63 kilograms assuming that the ice is frictionless how much
- 10:31
force is needed for him to maintain his velocity wait we have numbers here we
- 10:36
know force equals mass times acceleration [Force formula appears]
- 10:39
Didn't we promise that there wouldn't be any math yes we did and we're not going
- 10:43
to break that promise right now what's the first law objects in motion tend to [Newton's first law appears]
- 10:47
stay in motion and this is special pretend ice that is frictionless so it
- 10:52
takes no force to keep Isaac at this velocity so the correct answer is zero [Isaac skating on the ice]
- 10:59
Newton's other than the one in the wig doing the pirouette over there let's say
- 11:03
that he's still cruising along skating his little heart out at 15 meters per
- 11:07
second when he startled by a rogue seal he trips and falls onto a snowy patch
- 11:11
where he slides for three seconds before coming to a stop how much force acts on [Isaac Newton upside down sliding in the ice]
- 11:16
Ike to bring him to a stop okay so here's where we lied about not doing math
- 11:20
whoops so what law are we dealing with here well we're trying to figure out the
- 11:26
amount of force that caused Isaac's motion to change that sounds like a job
- 11:30
for law number two force equals mass times acceleration we know his mass is
- 11:36
63 kilograms do we know his acceleration nope but we can figure it out real quick [Apple standing on the ice]
- 11:42
acceleration equals the change in velocity over time he started with a
- 11:47
velocity of fifteen meters per second and his ending velocity was a big fat
- 11:51
goose egg so the change in velocity is negative 15 meters per second and this
- 11:56
slide took place over three seconds so the acceleration is negative five meters
- 12:01
per second squared now we can plug that number into our force equation....63
- 12:06
kilograms times negative five meters per second squared gives us a force of
- 12:11
negative 315 Newtons since force is a vector quantity that [Newton upside down in the clouds]
- 12:16
negative value tells us that the force was applied in the opposite direction of
- 12:20
the initial velocity dust yourself off there Isaac we want to see a triple axle
- 12:24
from you looks like that fall hasn't been a bad
- 12:27
mood not that it takes much with this guy mm-hm
- 12:31
let's say he throws a snowball at the seal nothing too hard that snowball just [Isaac throws snowball at a seal]
- 12:35
has a force of 3 Newtons how much force does the seals head exert on the
- 12:40
snowball we lied to you once we''re not gonna do it again
- 12:43
there's no math needed here what's the third law every action blah blah blah
- 12:48
something about a reaction right equal and opposite well the opposite of 3
- 12:53
Newton's is negative 3 Newtons so the seals head exerted a force of negative 3
- 12:58
Newton's on the snowball like we said we'll be getting up close and personal [Apple figureskating]
- 13:03
with each of these laws this lesson is just making sure we're clear on the
- 13:07
general concepts and we hope that you use Isaac as a role model for what a
- 13:11
genius can achieve but maybe not for how a genius should act because when you're
- 13:15
dealing with people you can't be sure they'll react to things predictably with
- 13:19
an equal and opposite reaction people even seals might react in a way [Seal sliding on the ice]
- 13:23
you weren't planning on like say when you hit them in the head with a snowball
- 13:28
skate like the wind Isaac [Seal chasing Isaac on the ice]
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