It is doubtful that Newton ever visited Italy.
Galileo Galilei is the one who 'apparently' dropped the balls of the tower and this may or may not of happened but it certainly was not a scientific experiment due to the errors involved (no stopwatch, air viscosity etc.)
If it did happen it would be a simple visual representation of the theory.
All I know is this:An object in motion stays in motion, and an object at rest stays at rest.Hope I helped!
It's called a Newton's Cradle, after Sir Isaac Newton. It demonstrates the conservation of energy.
Newton's Cradle
Mechanical waves were not discovered by a single individual, but have been studied and understood by scientists over many centuries. The ancient Greeks, such as Pythagoras and Aristotle, made observations and theories about waves, while later scientists like Isaac Newton and Thomas Young made significant contributions to our understanding of mechanical waves.
A swing oscillates and newton balls. A grandfather bell clock chimes oscillate as well as your eyes! :)
yes he did
es una cosa que me vale
All I know is this:An object in motion stays in motion, and an object at rest stays at rest.Hope I helped!
Galilieo. He dropped it from the leaning tower of Pisa. In ITALY,
italy, the leaning tower of Pisa
Galileo Galilei; leaning tower of Pisa.
a scientist and he made newton balls Honestly. Isaac Newton discovered gravity and his genius rate is about 120, very high. When an apple fell on his head, he worked it all out. And then he became facsinated in science.
Impact - a fine choice of words - He calculated the trajectory of cannon balls shot from canons.
newton balls
I can not tell you why he made it but I can tell you about it. Newton's cradle can be modeled with simple physics and minor errors if it is incorrectly assumed the balls always collide in pairs. If one ball strikes 4 stationary balls that are already touching, the simplification is unable to explain the resulting movements in all 5 balls, which are not due to friction losses. For example, in a real Newton's cradle the 4th has some movement and the first ball has a slight reverse movement. All the animations in this article show idealized action (simple solution) that only occurs if the balls are not touching initially and only collide in pairs.
It's called a Newton's Cradle, after Sir Isaac Newton. It demonstrates the conservation of energy.
Take your pick* 1642 Isaac Newton English physicist/mathematician/astronomer* 1904 Gerhard Herzberg Canadain physicist (molecular structure-Nobel 1971)