Sir Isaac Kicks Butt
Now came Newton's truly brilliant
insight: if the force of gravity reaches to the top of the highest tree, might
it not reach even further; in particular, might it not reach all the way
to the orbit of the Moon! Then, the
orbit of the Moon about the Earth could be a consequence of the gravitational
force, because the acceleration due to gravity could change the velocity of the
Moon in just such a way that it followed an orbit
around the earth.
This can be illustrated with the thought experiment shown in the
following figure. Suppose we fire a cannon horizontally from a high mountain;
the projectile will eventually fall to earth, as indicated by the shortest
trajectory in the figure, because of the gravitational
force directed toward the center of the Earth and the associated acceleration.
(Remember that an acceleration is a
change in velocity and that velocity is a vector, so it has both a magnitude
and a direction. Thus, an acceleration occurs if either or both the magnitude
and the direction of the velocity change.)