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Isaac Newton

By Jasmin Moreno
Basic Facts/Intro
● Born: January 4, 1643 in Woolsthorpe
Manor, United Kingdom
● Died: March 31, 1721 in Kensington, London,
United Kingdom
● Died at Age:84
● Education:Trinity College,
Cambridge(1667-1668)
● Famous as:Physicist, Mathematician,
Astronomer
● Nationality:British
● Married:NO
● Diseases:Depression, Stammered/ Stuttered
● Discoveries/Inventions:Reflecting Telescope
Newton’s Life
Isaac Newton was born on 4 January 1643 in Woolsthorpe, a hamlet
near Grantham in Lincolnshire. When Newton was young he father
separated from his mother, and his unrivaled hatred of his stepfather.
Until Hanna returned to Woolsthorpe in 1653 after the death of her
second husband, newton was denied his mother’s attention. Newton’s
childhood was anything but happy, and throughout his life he verged on
emotional collapse, occasionally falling into violent and vindictive attacks
against friend and foe alike.
Newton’s First Law of Motion
Newton’s first law of motion is
often started as an object at rest
stays at rest and an object in
motion stays in motion with the
same speed and in the same
direction unless acted upon by an
unbalanced force.
Newton’s Second Law of Motion
Newton’s second law of motion can
be formally stated as follows: The
acceleration of an object as
produced by a net force is directly
proportional to the magnitude of the
net force, in the same direction as
the net force, and inversely
proportional to the mass of the
object.
Newton’s Third Law of Motion
Newton’s Third Law of Motion is a force
is a push or a pull that acts upon an
object as a results of its interaction
with another object. These two forces
are called action and reaction forces
and are the subject of Newton’s third
law of motion . Formally stated,
Newton’s third law is: For every action,
there is an equal and opposite reaction.
Newton’s Universal Gravitation
Newton’s law of universal
gravitation states that a particle
in the universe using a force that
is directly proportional to the
product of their masses and
inversely proportional to the
square of the distance between
their centers.
Newton’s contribution to science and math
Newton’s contribution to science and math. Sir Isaac Newton is best
known for his work on gravity. He also worked on and discovered many
other scientific wonders during his lifetime (1643-1727). His work in
physics was so advanced that he was the first scientist to be knighted
which is a great honor in england and the reason “Sir” precedes his
name. Over two miraculous years, during the time of the great plague of
1665-1666 the young Newton developed a new theory of light, discovered
and quantified gravitation, and pioneered a revolutionary new approach
to mathematics:infinitesimal calculus.

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