What Really Happened with the Apple?
Probably the more correct version of the story is that Newton, upon observing
an apple fall from a tree, began to think along the following lines:
The apple is accelerated, since its velocity
changes from zero as it is hanging on the tree and moves toward the ground.
Thus, by Newton's 2nd Law there must be a force that acts on the apple to cause
this acceleration. Let's
call this force "gravity", and the associated acceleration the "accleration due
to gravity".
Then imagine the apple tree is twice as high. Again,
we expect the apple to be accelerated toward the ground, so this suggests that
this force that we call gravity reaches to the top of the tallest
apple tree.
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.)
The Center of Mass for a Binary System
If you think about it a moment, it may seem a little strange that in Kepler's
Laws the Sun is fixed at a point in space and the planet revolves around it.
Why is the Sun privileged? Kepler had rather mystical ideas about
the Sun, endowing it with almost god-like qualities that justified its special
place.
However Newton, largely as a corollary of his 3rd Law,
demonstrated that the situation actually was more symmetrical than Kepler
imagined and that the Sun does not occupy a privileged postion;
in the process he modified Kepler's 3rd Law.
Newton's Modification of Kepler's Third Law
Because for every action there is an equal
and opposite reaction, Newton realized that in the planet-Sun system the planet
does not orbit around a stationary Sun. Instead, Newton proposed that both the
planet and the Sun orbited around the common center of mass for the planet-Sun
system. He then modified Kepler's 3rd Law to read,
Now notice what happens in Newton's new equation if one of the masses (either 1
or 2; remember the symmetry)
is very large compared with the other. In particular, suppose the Sun is
labeled as mass 1, and its mass
is much larger than the mass for any of the planets.
Then the sum of the two masses is always approximately equal to the mass of the
Sun, and if we take ratios of Kepler's 3rd Law for two different planets the
masses cancel from the ratio and we are left with the
original form of Kepler's 3rd Law:
Two Limiting Cases
We can gain further insight by considering the position of the center of mass
in two limits. First consider the example just addressed, where one mass
is much larger than the other. Then, we see that the center of mass for the
system essentially concides with the center of the massive object:
However, now consider the other limiting case where the two masses are equal to
each other.
Then it is easy to see that the center of mass lies equidistant
from the two masses and if they are gravitationally bound to each other,
each mass orbits the common center of mass for the
system lying midway between them:
These limiting cases for the location of the center of mass
are perhaps familiar from our afore-mentioned playground
experience.
If persons of equal weight are on a see-saw, the fulcrum must be
placed in the middle to balance, but if one person weighs much more than the
other person, the fulcrum must be placed close to the heavier person to
achieve
balance.
Weight and the Gravitational Force
We have seen that in the Universal Law of Gravitation the crucial quantity is
mass. In popular language mass and weight are often used to mean the same
thing; in reality they are related but quite different things. What we
commonly call weight is really just the
gravitational force
exerted on an
object of a certain mass. We can illustrate by choosing
the Earth as one of the two masses
in the previous illustration of the Law of Gravitation:
Mass and Weight
Mass is a measure of how much material is in an object, but
weight is a measure of
the gravitational force exerted on that material in a gravitational field;
thus, mass and weight are proportional to each other, with the acceleration due
to gravity as the proportionality constant.
It follows that
mass is constant for an object (actually this is not quite true, but we
will save that surprise for our later discussion of the
Relativity Theory),
but weight depends on the location of the object.
For example, if we transported the preceding object of mass
m to the surface of
the Moon, the gravitational acceleration would change because the radius and
mass of the Moon both differ from those of the Earth. Thus, our object
has mass m
both on the surface of the Earth and on the surface of the Moon, but it
will weigh much less on the surface of the Moon
because the gravitational acceleration there is a factor of 6
less than at the surface
of the Earth.
There is a popular story that Newton was sitting under an apple tree, an apple
fell on his head, and he suddenly thought of the Universal Law of Gravitation.
As in all such legends, this is almost certainly not true in its details,
but the story
contains elements of what actually happened.
Consider the diagram shown to the right.
We may define a point called the center of
mass between two objects through the equations
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