Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Why things move
- 2 From the falling apple to Apollo 11
- 3 How strong is gravity?
- 4 Fusion reactors in space
- 5 Living in curved spacetime
- 6 Ocean tides and gravity waves
- 7 The strange world of black holes
- 8 Cosmic energy machines
- 9 The big bang
- 10 The Universe: from simplicity to complexity
- 11 Gravity and the creation of matter
- 12 The many faces of gravity
- Index
2 - From the falling apple to Apollo 11
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Why things move
- 2 From the falling apple to Apollo 11
- 3 How strong is gravity?
- 4 Fusion reactors in space
- 5 Living in curved spacetime
- 6 Ocean tides and gravity waves
- 7 The strange world of black holes
- 8 Cosmic energy machines
- 9 The big bang
- 10 The Universe: from simplicity to complexity
- 11 Gravity and the creation of matter
- 12 The many faces of gravity
- Index
Summary
WHY DID THE APPLE FALL?
Apples have played a prominent role in many legends, myths, and fairytales. It was the forbidden apple that became the source of temptation to Eve and ultimately brought God's displeasure upon Adam. It was the apple of discord that led to the launching of a thousand ships and the long Trojan War. It was a poisoned apple that nearly killed Snow White, and so on.
For physicists, however, the most important apple legend concerns the apple that fell in an orchard in Woolsthorpe in Lincolnshire, England, in the year 1666. This particular apple was seen by Isaac Newton, who ‘fell into a profound meditation upon the cause which draws all bodies in a line which, if prolonged, would pass very nearly through the centre of the earth.’
The quotation is from Voltaire's Philosophie de Newton, published in 1738, which contains the oldest known account of the apple story. This story does not appear in Newton's early biographies, nor is it mentioned in his own account of how he thought of universal gravitation. Most probably it is a legend.
It is interesting to consider how rare it is to see an apple actually fall from a tree. An apple may spend a few weeks of its life on the tree, and after its fall it may lie on the ground for a few days. But how long does it take to fall from the tree to the ground? For a drop of, say, 3 metres, the answer is about three-quarters of a second.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Lighter Side of Gravity , pp. 19 - 38Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996