| Peter Guthrie Tait - 1865 - 394 pages
...referring to small and trivial cases as well as to the grandest phenomena we can conceive. 60. LAW II. Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction of the straight line in which the force acts. We have considered change of velocity, or acceleration,... | |
| Peter Guthrie Tait, William John Steele - Dynamics of a particle - 1871 - 462 pages
...referring to small and trivial cases as well as to the grandest phenomena we can conceive. 65. LAW II. Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction of the straight ''ne in which the force acts. We have considered change of velocity, or acceleration,... | |
| George Farrer Rodwell - Physical sciences - 1871 - 620 pages
...and if it be in motion it will continue to move in the same straight line with uniform speed. Law II. Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction of the straight line in which the force art». When a person is on board a boat which is moving uniformly... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin, Peter Guthrie Tait - Mechanics, Analytic - 1872 - 316 pages
...proportionalem esse vi motrici impressae, et fieri secundum lineam rectam qud vis ilia imprimitur. Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction of the straight line in which the force acts. 218. If any force generates motion, a double force will... | |
| Thomas Minchin Goodeve - Mechanics - 1874 - 340 pages
...we pass on to examine the exact relation between force and the motion which it produces. Second Law. Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction of the straight line in which the force is impressed. Hitherto it has been sufficient to speak of the... | |
| Thomas Minchin Goodeve - Mechanics - 1874 - 336 pages
...we pass on to examine the exact relation between force and the motion which it produces. Second Law. Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction of the straight line in which the force is impressed. Hitherto it has been sufficient to speak of the... | |
| S. Parkinson - Mechanics - 1874 - 420 pages
...proportionalem esse vi motrici impress^, et fieri secundum lineam rectam qud vis ilia •imprimitur. " Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction of the straight line in which the force acts." LEX III. Actioni contrariam semper et cequalem esse... | |
| Chambers W. and R., ltd - 1874 - 848 pages
...line, except in so far as it may be compelled to change that state by forces impressed upon it. id. Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction of the straight line in which the force is impressed. 3</. To every action there is always an equal... | |
| W. G. Willson - Dynamics - 1874 - 294 pages
...motion. This leads to the enunciation of the second law. 7. LAW II. — The change in the quantity of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction of the straight line in which the force acts. By the change of the quantity of motion is here to be... | |
| William Garnett - 1875 - 348 pages
...laws of motion, and first given by Newton. As enunciated by him these laws are as follows : LAW II. Change of motion is proportional to the impressed force, and takes place in the direction in which that force acts. LAW III. Action and reaction are always equal and opposite. 25. The evidence upon... | |
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