Theory of Gravity

  • Period: 300 to

    Gravity

  • 340

    Aristotle (BC)

    Aristotle (BC)
    objects with different weights fall at different speeds; rocks fall to center/fire rises
  • 400

    Ptolemy (140 AD)

    Ptolemy (140 AD)
    accredited with geocentric theory; theory that earth is the center of the universe; because the earth was seemingly at rest, other objects must orbit around it
  • Galileo Galilei

    Galileo Galilei
    Galileo formulated the equation for a falling body or an object moving in uniform acceleration: d=1/2gt2; dropped objects from leaning tower of Pisa to prove all objects, no matter mass, fall at same rate
  • Isaac Newton

    Isaac Newton
    any two objects in the Universe exert gravitational attraction on each other, with the force having a universal form; thought upon after seeing apple fall; Newton's orbital cannon proved that if cannon was fired horizontally from mountain, it would either fall or orbit, depending on velocity.
  • Henry Cavendish

    Henry Cavendish
    measured the value of G in the equation for the law of universal gravitation; used this to discover the mass of the sun; obtained using the torsion balance technique: When two heavy attracting bodies are placed on opposite sides of a dumbbell, the dumbbell twists by a very small amount. the magnitude of the twists gives us G.
  • Albert Einstein

    Albert Einstein
    gravity was part of general theory of relativity; said gravity was not a force, but a curve in space-time; based on a idea that due to gravity, objects moving on straight parallel line will intersect because there paths become spherical.