fbpx
Wikipedia

Classical mechanics

Classical mechanics is a physical theory describing the motion of macroscopic objects, from projectiles to parts of machinery and astronomical objects, such as spacecraft, planets, stars, and galaxies. The "classical" in "classical mechanics" does not refer to classical antiquity, as it might in, say, classical architecture. On the contrary, the development of classical mechanics involved substantial change in the methods and philosophy of physics.[1] Instead, the qualifier distinguishes classical mechanics from physics developed after the revolutions of the early 20th century, which revealed limitations of classical mechanics.[2]

Diagram of orbital motion of a satellite around the Earth, showing perpendicular velocity and acceleration (force) vectors, represented through a classical interpretation

The earliest formulation of classical mechanics is often referred to as Newtonian mechanics. It consists of the physical concepts based on the 17th century foundational works of Sir Isaac Newton, and the mathematical methods invented by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Leonhard Euler and others to describe the motion of bodies under the influence of forces. Later, methods based on energy were developed by Euler, Joseph-Louis Lagrange, William Rowan Hamilton and others, leading to analytical mechanics including Lagrangian mechanics and Hamiltonian mechanics. These advances, made predominantly in the 18th and 19th centuries, extend substantially beyond earlier works; they are, with some modification, used in all areas of modern physics.

For objects governed by classical mechanics, if the present state is known with absolute precision, it is possible to predict how it will move in the future (determinism), and how it has moved in the past (reversibility); in practice absolute precision is not possible and chaos theory shows that the long term predictions of classical mechanics are not reliable. Classical mechanics provides accurate results when studying large objects that are not extremely massive and speeds not approaching the speed of light. When the objects being examined have about the size of an atom diameter, it becomes necessary to introduce the other major sub-field of mechanics: quantum mechanics. To describe velocities that are not small compared to the speed of light, special relativity is needed. In cases where objects become extremely massive, general relativity becomes applicable. However, a number of modern sources do include relativistic mechanics in classical physics, which in their view represents classical mechanics in its most developed and accurate form.

Branches edit

Traditional division edit

Classical mechanics was traditionally divided into three main branches. Statics is the branch of classical mechanics that is concerned with the analysis of force and torque acting on a physical system that does not experience an acceleration, but rather is in equilibrium with its environment.[3]Kinematics describes the motion of points, bodies (objects), and systems of bodies (groups of objects) without considering the forces that cause them to move.[4][5][3] Kinematics, as a field of study, is often referred to as the "geometry of motion" and is occasionally seen as a branch of mathematics.[6][7][8] Dynamics goes beyond merely describing objects' behavior and also considers the forces which explain it. Some authors (for example, Taylor (2005)[9] and Greenwood (1997)[10]) include special relativity within classical dynamics.

Forces vs. energy edit

Another division is based on the choice of mathematical formalism. Classical mechanics can be mathematically presented in multiple different ways. The physical content of these different formulations is the same, but they provide different insights and facilitate different types of calculations. While the term "Newtonian mechanics" is sometimes used as a synonym for non-relativistic classical physics, it can also refer to a particular formalism based on Newton's laws of motion. Newtonian mechanics in this sense emphasizes force as a vector quantity.[11]

In contrast, analytical mechanics uses scalar properties of motion representing the system as a whole—usually its kinetic energy and potential energy. The equations of motion are derived from the scalar quantity by some underlying principle about the scalar's variation. Two dominant branches of analytical mechanics are Lagrangian mechanics, which uses generalized coordinates and corresponding generalized velocities in configuration space, and Hamiltonian mechanics, which uses coordinates and corresponding momenta in phase space. Both formulations are equivalent by a Legendre transformation on the generalized coordinates, velocities and momenta; therefore, both contain the same information for describing the dynamics of a system. There are other formulations such as Hamilton–Jacobi theory, Routhian mechanics, and Appell's equation of motion. All equations of motion for particles and fields, in any formalism, can be derived from the widely applicable result called the principle of least action. One result is Noether's theorem, a statement which connects conservation laws to their associated symmetries.

By region of application edit

Alternatively, a division can be made by region of application:

Description of objects and their motion edit

 
The analysis of projectile motion is a part of classical mechanics.

For simplicity, classical mechanics often models real-world objects as point particles, that is, objects with negligible size. The motion of a point particle is determined by a small number of parameters: its position, mass, and the forces applied to it. Classical mechanics also describes the more complex motions of extended non-pointlike objects. Euler's laws provide extensions to Newton's laws in this area. The concepts of angular momentum rely on the same calculus used to describe one-dimensional motion. The rocket equation extends the notion of rate of change of an object's momentum to include the effects of an object "losing mass". (These generalizations/extensions are derived from Newton's laws, say, by decomposing a solid body into a collection of points.)

In reality, the kind of objects that classical mechanics can describe always have a non-zero size. (The behavior of very small particles, such as the electron, is more accurately described by quantum mechanics.) Objects with non-zero size have more complicated behavior than hypothetical point particles, because of the additional degrees of freedom, e.g., a baseball can spin while it is moving. However, the results for point particles can be used to study such objects by treating them as composite objects, made of a large number of collectively acting point particles. The center of mass of a composite object behaves like a point particle.

Classical mechanics assumes that matter and energy have definite, knowable attributes such as location in space and speed. Non-relativistic mechanics also assumes that forces act instantaneously (see also Action at a distance).

Kinematics edit

The SI derived "mechanical"
(that is, not electromagnetic or thermal)
units with kg, m and s
position m
angular position/angle unitless (radian)
velocity m·s−1
angular velocity s−1
acceleration m·s−2
angular acceleration s−2
jerk m·s−3
"angular jerk" s−3
specific energy m2·s−2
absorbed dose rate m2·s−3
moment of inertia kg·m2
momentum kg·m·s−1
angular momentum kg·m2·s−1
force kg·m·s−2
torque kg·m2·s−2
energy kg·m2·s−2
power kg·m2·s−3
pressure and energy density kg·m−1·s−2
surface tension kg·s−2
spring constant kg·s−2
irradiance and energy flux kg·s−3
kinematic viscosity m2·s−1
dynamic viscosity kg·m−1·s−1
density (mass density) kg·m−3
specific weight (weight density) kg·m−2·s−2
number density m−3
action kg·m2·s−1

The position of a point particle is defined in relation to a coordinate system centered on an arbitrary fixed reference point in space called the origin O. A simple coordinate system might describe the position of a particle P with a vector notated by an arrow labeled r that points from the origin O to point P. In general, the point particle does not need to be stationary relative to O. In cases where P is moving relative to O, r is defined as a function of t, time. In pre-Einstein relativity (known as Galilean relativity), time is considered an absolute, i.e., the time interval that is observed to elapse between any given pair of events is the same for all observers.[12] In addition to relying on absolute time, classical mechanics assumes Euclidean geometry for the structure of space.[13]

Velocity and speed edit

The velocity, or the rate of change of displacement with time, is defined as the derivative of the position with respect to time:

 .

In classical mechanics, velocities are directly additive and subtractive. For example, if one car travels east at 60 km/h and passes another car traveling in the same direction at 50 km/h, the slower car perceives the faster car as traveling east at 60 − 50 = 10 km/h. However, from the perspective of the faster car, the slower car is moving 10 km/h to the west, often denoted as −10 km/h where the sign implies opposite direction. Velocities are directly additive as vector quantities; they must be dealt with using vector analysis.

Mathematically, if the velocity of the first object in the previous discussion is denoted by the vector u = ud and the velocity of the second object by the vector v = ve, where u is the speed of the first object, v is the speed of the second object, and d and e are unit vectors in the directions of motion of each object respectively, then the velocity of the first object as seen by the second object is:

 

Similarly, the first object sees the velocity of the second object as:

 

When both objects are moving in the same direction, this equation can be simplified to:

 

Or, by ignoring direction, the difference can be given in terms of speed only:

 

Acceleration edit

The acceleration, or rate of change of velocity, is the derivative of the velocity with respect to time (the second derivative of the position with respect to time):

 

Acceleration represents the velocity's change over time. Velocity can change in magnitude, direction, or both. Occasionally, a decrease in the magnitude of velocity "v" is referred to as deceleration, but generally any change in the velocity over time, including deceleration, is referred to as acceleration.

Frames of reference edit

While the position, velocity and acceleration of a particle can be described with respect to any observer in any state of motion, classical mechanics assumes the existence of a special family of reference frames in which the mechanical laws of nature take a comparatively simple form. These special reference frames are called inertial frames. An inertial frame is an idealized frame of reference within which an object with zero net force acting upon it moves with a constant velocity; that is, it is either at rest or moving uniformly in a straight line. In an inertial frame Newton's law of motion,  , is valid.[14]: 185 

Non-inertial reference frames accelerate in relation to another inertial frame. A body rotating with respect to an inertial frame is not an inertial frame.[14] When viewed from an inertial frame, particles in the non-inertial frame appear to move in ways not explained by forces from existing fields in the reference frame. Hence, it appears that there are other forces that enter the equations of motion solely as a result of the relative acceleration. These forces are referred to as fictitious forces, inertia forces, or pseudo-forces.

Consider two reference frames S and S'. For observers in each of the reference frames an event has space-time coordinates of (x,y,z,t) in frame S and (x',y',z',t') in frame S'. Assuming time is measured the same in all reference frames, if we require x = x' when t = 0, then the relation between the space-time coordinates of the same event observed from the reference frames S' and S, which are moving at a relative velocity u in the x direction, is:

 

This set of formulas defines a group transformation known as the Galilean transformation (informally, the Galilean transform). This group is a limiting case of the Poincaré group used in special relativity. The limiting case applies when the velocity u is very small compared to c, the speed of light.

The transformations have the following consequences:

  • v′ = vu (the velocity v′ of a particle from the perspective of S′ is slower by u than its velocity v from the perspective of S)
  • a′ = a (the acceleration of a particle is the same in any inertial reference frame)
  • F′ = F (the force on a particle is the same in any inertial reference frame)
  • the speed of light is not a constant in classical mechanics, nor does the special position given to the speed of light in relativistic mechanics have a counterpart in classical mechanics.

For some problems, it is convenient to use rotating coordinates (reference frames). Thereby one can either keep a mapping to a convenient inertial frame, or introduce additionally a fictitious centrifugal force and Coriolis force.

Newtonian mechanics edit

A force in physics is any action that causes an object's velocity to change; that is, to accelerate. A force originates from within a field, such as an electro-static field (caused by static electrical charges), electro-magnetic field (caused by moving charges), or gravitational field (caused by mass), among others.

Newton was the first to mathematically express the relationship between force and momentum. Some physicists interpret Newton's second law of motion as a definition of force and mass, while others consider it a fundamental postulate, a law of nature.[15] Either interpretation has the same mathematical consequences, historically known as "Newton's Second Law":

 

The quantity mv is called the (canonical) momentum. The net force on a particle is thus equal to the rate of change of the momentum of the particle with time. Since the definition of acceleration is a = dv/dt, the second law can be written in the simplified and more familiar form:

 

So long as the force acting on a particle is known, Newton's second law is sufficient to describe the motion of a particle. Once independent relations for each force acting on a particle are available, they can be substituted into Newton's second law to obtain an ordinary differential equation, which is called the equation of motion.

As an example, assume that friction is the only force acting on the particle, and that it may be modeled as a function of the velocity of the particle, for example:

 

where λ is a positive constant, the negative sign states that the force is opposite the sense of the velocity. Then the equation of motion is

 

This can be integrated to obtain

 

where v0 is the initial velocity. This means that the velocity of this particle decays exponentially to zero as time progresses. In this case, an equivalent viewpoint is that the kinetic energy of the particle is absorbed by friction (which converts it to heat energy in accordance with the conservation of energy), and the particle is slowing down. This expression can be further integrated to obtain the position r of the particle as a function of time.

Important forces include the gravitational force and the Lorentz force for electromagnetism. In addition, Newton's third law can sometimes be used to deduce the forces acting on a particle: if it is known that particle A exerts a force F on another particle B, it follows that B must exert an equal and opposite reaction force, −F, on A. The strong form of Newton's third law requires that F and −F act along the line connecting A and B, while the weak form does not. Illustrations of the weak form of Newton's third law are often found for magnetic forces.[clarification needed]

Work and energy edit

If a constant force F is applied to a particle that makes a displacement Δr,[note 1] the work done by the force is defined as the scalar product of the force and displacement vectors:

 

More generally, if the force varies as a function of position as the particle moves from r1 to r2 along a path C, the work done on the particle is given by the line integral

 

If the work done in moving the particle from r1 to r2 is the same no matter what path is taken, the force is said to be conservative. Gravity is a conservative force, as is the force due to an idealized spring, as given by Hooke's law. The force due to friction is non-conservative.

The kinetic energy Ek of a particle of mass m travelling at speed v is given by

 

For extended objects composed of many particles, the kinetic energy of the composite body is the sum of the kinetic energies of the particles.

The work–energy theorem states that for a particle of constant mass m, the total work W done on the particle as it moves from position r1 to r2 is equal to the change in kinetic energy Ek of the particle:

 

Conservative forces can be expressed as the gradient of a scalar function, known as the potential energy and denoted Ep:

 

If all the forces acting on a particle are conservative, and Ep is the total potential energy (which is defined as a work of involved forces to rearrange mutual positions of bodies), obtained by summing the potential energies corresponding to each force

 

The decrease in the potential energy is equal to the increase in the kinetic energy

 

This result is known as conservation of energy and states that the total energy,

 

is constant in time. It is often useful, because many commonly encountered forces are conservative.

Lagrangian mechanics edit

Lagrangian mechanics is a formulation of classical mechanics founded on the stationary-action principle (also known as the principle of least action). It was introduced by the Italian-French mathematician and astronomer Joseph-Louis Lagrange in his presentation to the Turin Academy of Science in 1760[16] culminating in his 1788 grand opus, Mécanique analytique. Lagrangian mechanics describes a mechanical system as a pair   consisting of a configuration space   and a smooth function   within that space called a Lagrangian. For many systems,   where   and   are the kinetic and potential energy of the system, respectively. The stationary action principle requires that the action functional of the system derived from   must remain at a stationary point (a maximum, minimum, or saddle) throughout the time evolution of the system. This constraint allows the calculation of the equations of motion of the system using Lagrange's equations.[17]

Hamiltonian mechanics edit

Hamiltonian mechanics emerged in 1833 as a reformulation of Lagrangian mechanics. Introduced by Sir William Rowan Hamilton,[18] Hamiltonian mechanics replaces (generalized) velocities   used in Lagrangian mechanics with (generalized) momenta. Both theories provide interpretations of classical mechanics and describe the same physical phenomena. Hamiltonian mechanics has a close relationship with geometry (notably, symplectic geometry and Poisson structures) and serves as a link between classical and quantum mechanics.

In this formalism, the dynamics of a system are governed by Hamilton's equations, which express the time derivatives of position and momentum variables in terms of partial derivatives of a function called the Hamiltonian:

 
The Hamiltonian is the Legendre transform of the Lagrangian, and in many situations of physical interest it is equal to the total energy of the system.

Limits of validity edit

 
Domain of validity for classical mechanics

Many branches of classical mechanics are simplifications or approximations of more accurate forms; two of the most accurate being general relativity and relativistic statistical mechanics. Geometric optics is an approximation to the quantum theory of light, and does not have a superior "classical" form.

When both quantum mechanics and classical mechanics cannot apply, such as at the quantum level with many degrees of freedom, quantum field theory (QFT) is of use. QFT deals with small distances, and large speeds with many degrees of freedom as well as the possibility of any change in the number of particles throughout the interaction. When treating large degrees of freedom at the macroscopic level, statistical mechanics becomes useful. Statistical mechanics describes the behavior of large (but countable) numbers of particles and their interactions as a whole at the macroscopic level. Statistical mechanics is mainly used in thermodynamics for systems that lie outside the bounds of the assumptions of classical thermodynamics. In the case of high velocity objects approaching the speed of light, classical mechanics is enhanced by special relativity. In case that objects become extremely heavy (i.e., their Schwarzschild radius is not negligibly small for a given application), deviations from Newtonian mechanics become apparent and can be quantified by using the parameterized post-Newtonian formalism. In that case, general relativity (GR) becomes applicable. However, until now there is no theory of quantum gravity unifying GR and QFT in the sense that it could be used when objects become extremely small and heavy.[4][5]

Newtonian approximation to special relativity edit

In special relativity, the momentum of a particle is given by

 

where m is the particle's rest mass, v its velocity, v is the modulus of v, and c is the speed of light.

If v is very small compared to c, v2/c2 is approximately zero, and so

 

Thus the Newtonian equation p = mv is an approximation of the relativistic equation for bodies moving with low speeds compared to the speed of light.

For example, the relativistic cyclotron frequency of a cyclotron, gyrotron, or high voltage magnetron is given by

 

where fc is the classical frequency of an electron (or other charged particle) with kinetic energy T and (rest) mass m0 circling in a magnetic field. The (rest) mass of an electron is 511 keV. So the frequency correction is 1% for a magnetic vacuum tube with a 5.11 kV direct current accelerating voltage.

Classical approximation to quantum mechanics edit

The ray approximation of classical mechanics breaks down when the de Broglie wavelength is not much smaller than other dimensions of the system. For non-relativistic particles, this wavelength is

 

where h is the Planck constant and p is the momentum.

Again, this happens with electrons before it happens with heavier particles. For example, the electrons used by Clinton Davisson and Lester Germer in 1927, accelerated by 54 V, had a wavelength of 0.167 nm, which was long enough to exhibit a single diffraction side lobe when reflecting from the face of a nickel crystal with atomic spacing of 0.215 nm. With a larger vacuum chamber, it would seem relatively easy to increase the angular resolution from around a radian to a milliradian and see quantum diffraction from the periodic patterns of integrated circuit computer memory.

More practical examples of the failure of classical mechanics on an engineering scale are conduction by quantum tunneling in tunnel diodes and very narrow transistor gates in integrated circuits.

Classical mechanics is the same extreme high frequency approximation as geometric optics. It is more often accurate because it describes particles and bodies with rest mass. These have more momentum and therefore shorter De Broglie wavelengths than massless particles, such as light, with the same kinetic energies.

History edit

The study of the motion of bodies is an ancient one, making classical mechanics one of the oldest and largest subjects in science, engineering, and technology. The development of classical mechanics lead to the development of many areas of mathematics.[19]: 54 

Some Greek philosophers of antiquity, among them Aristotle, founder of Aristotelian physics, may have been the first to maintain the idea that "everything happens for a reason" and that theoretical principles can assist in the understanding of nature. While to a modern reader, many of these preserved ideas come forth as eminently reasonable, there is a conspicuous lack of both mathematical theory and controlled experiment, as we know it. These later became decisive factors in forming modern science, and their early application came to be known as classical mechanics. In his Elementa super demonstrationem ponderum, medieval mathematician Jordanus de Nemore introduced the concept of "positional gravity" and the use of component forces.

 
Three stage Theory of impetus according to Albert of Saxony

The first published causal explanation of the motions of planets was Johannes Kepler's Astronomia nova, published in 1609. He concluded, based on Tycho Brahe's observations on the orbit of Mars, that the planet's orbits were ellipses. This break with ancient thought was happening around the same time that Galileo was proposing abstract mathematical laws for the motion of objects. He may (or may not) have performed the famous experiment of dropping two cannonballs of different weights from the tower of Pisa, showing that they both hit the ground at the same time. The reality of that particular experiment is disputed, but he did carry out quantitative experiments by rolling balls on an inclined plane. His theory of accelerated motion was derived from the results of such experiments and forms a cornerstone of classical mechanics. In 1673 Christiaan Huygens described in his Horologium Oscillatorium the first two laws of motion.[20] The work is also the first modern treatise in which a physical problem (the accelerated motion of a falling body) is idealized by a set of parameters then analyzed mathematically and constitutes one of the seminal works of applied mathematics.[21]

 
Sir Isaac Newton (1643–1727), an influential figure in the history of physics and whose three laws of motion form the basis of classical mechanics

Newton founded his principles of natural philosophy on three proposed laws of motion: the law of inertia, his second law of acceleration (mentioned above), and the law of action and reaction; and hence laid the foundations for classical mechanics. Both Newton's second and third laws were given the proper scientific and mathematical treatment in Newton's Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica. Here they are distinguished from earlier attempts at explaining similar phenomena, which were either incomplete, incorrect, or given little accurate mathematical expression. Newton also enunciated the principles of conservation of momentum and angular momentum. In mechanics, Newton was also the first to provide the first correct scientific and mathematical formulation of gravity in Newton's law of universal gravitation. The combination of Newton's laws of motion and gravitation provides the fullest and most accurate description of classical mechanics. He demonstrated that these laws apply to everyday objects as well as to celestial objects. In particular, he obtained a theoretical explanation of Kepler's laws of motion of the planets.

Newton had previously invented the calculus; however, the Principia was formulated entirely in terms of long-established geometric methods in emulation of Euclid. Newton, and most of his contemporaries, with the notable exception of Huygens, worked on the assumption that classical mechanics would be able to explain all phenomena, including light, in the form of geometric optics. Even when discovering the so-called Newton's rings (a wave interference phenomenon) he maintained his own corpuscular theory of light.

 
Lagrange's contribution was realising Newton's ideas in the language of modern mathematics, now called Lagrangian mechanics.

After Newton, classical mechanics became a principal field of study in mathematics as well as physics. Mathematical formulations progressively allowed finding solutions to a far greater number of problems. The first notable mathematical treatment was in 1788 by Joseph Louis Lagrange. Lagrangian mechanics was in turn re-formulated in 1833 by William Rowan Hamilton.

 
Hamilton developed an alternative to Lagrangian mechanics now called Hamiltonian mechanics.

Some difficulties were discovered in the late 19th century that could only be resolved by more modern physics. Some of these difficulties related to compatibility with electromagnetic theory, and the famous Michelson–Morley experiment. The resolution of these problems led to the special theory of relativity, often still considered a part of classical mechanics.

A second set of difficulties were related to thermodynamics. When combined with thermodynamics, classical mechanics leads to the Gibbs paradox of classical statistical mechanics, in which entropy is not a well-defined quantity. Black-body radiation was not explained without the introduction of quanta. As experiments reached the atomic level, classical mechanics failed to explain, even approximately, such basic things as the energy levels and sizes of atoms and the photo-electric effect. The effort at resolving these problems led to the development of quantum mechanics.

Since the end of the 20th century, classical mechanics in physics has no longer been an independent theory. Instead, classical mechanics is now considered an approximate theory to the more general quantum mechanics. Emphasis has shifted to understanding the fundamental forces of nature as in the Standard Model and its more modern extensions into a unified theory of everything. Classical mechanics is a theory useful for the study of the motion of non-quantum mechanical, low-energy particles in weak gravitational fields.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The displacement Δr is the difference of the particle's initial and final positions: Δr = rfinalrinitial.

References edit

  1. ^ Ben-Chaim, Michael (2004), Experimental Philosophy and the Birth of Empirical Science: Boyle, Locke and Newton, Aldershot: Ashgate, ISBN 0-7546-4091-4, OCLC 53887772.
  2. ^ Agar, Jon (2012), Science in the Twentieth Century and Beyond, Cambridge: Polity Press, ISBN 978-0-7456-3469-2.
  3. ^ a b Thomas Wallace Wright (1896). Elements of Mechanics Including Kinematics, Kinetics and Statics: with applications. E. and F. N. Spon. p. 85.
  4. ^ Edmund Taylor Whittaker (1904). A Treatise on the Analytical Dynamics of Particles and Rigid Bodies. Cambridge University Press. Chapter 1. ISBN 0-521-35883-3.
  5. ^ Joseph Stiles Beggs (1983). Kinematics. Taylor & Francis. p. 1. ISBN 0-89116-355-7.
  6. ^ Russell C. Hibbeler (2009). "Kinematics and kinetics of a particle". Engineering Mechanics: Dynamics (12th ed.). Prentice Hall. p. 298. ISBN 978-0-13-607791-6.
  7. ^ Ahmed A. Shabana (2003). "Reference kinematics". Dynamics of Multibody Systems (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-54411-5.
  8. ^ P. P. Teodorescu (2007). "Kinematics". Mechanical Systems, Classical Models: Particle Mechanics. Springer. p. 287. ISBN 978-1-4020-5441-9..
  9. ^ John Robert Taylor (2005). Classical Mechanics. University Science Books. ISBN 978-1-891389-22-1.
  10. ^ Donald T Greenwood (1997). Classical Mechanics (Reprint of 1977 ed.). Courier Dover Publications. p. 1. ISBN 0-486-69690-1.
  11. ^ Lanczos, Cornelius (1970). The variational principles of mechanics (4th ed.). New York: Dover Publications Inc. Introduction, pp. xxi–xxix. ISBN 0-486-65067-7.
  12. ^ Knudsen, Jens M.; Hjorth, Poul (2012). Elements of Newtonian Mechanics (illustrated ed.). Springer Science & Business Media. p. 30. ISBN 978-3-642-97599-8. Extract of page 30
  13. ^ MIT physics 8.01 lecture notes (page 12). Archived 2013-07-09 at the Library of Congress Web Archives (PDF)
  14. ^ a b Goldstein, Herbert (1950). Classical Mechanics (1st ed.). Addison-Wesley.
  15. ^ Thornton, Stephen T.; Marion, Jerry B. (2004). Classical dynamics of particles and systems (5. ed.). Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole. pp. 50. ISBN 978-0-534-40896-1.
  16. ^ Fraser, Craig (1983). "J. L. Lagrange's Early Contributions to the Principles and Methods of Mechanics". Archive for History of Exact Sciences. 28 (3): 197–241. JSTOR 41133689.
  17. ^ Hand, L. N.; Finch, J. D. (1998). Analytical Mechanics (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 18–20, 23, 46, 51. ISBN 9780521575720.
  18. ^ Hamilton, William Rowan (1833). On a general method of expressing the paths of light, & of the planets, by the coefficients of a characteristic function. Printed by P.D. Hardy. OCLC 68159539.
  19. ^ Doran, Chris; Lasenby, Anthony N. (2003). Geometric algebra for physicists. Cambridge New York: Cambridge university press. ISBN 978-0-521-48022-2.
  20. ^ Rob Iliffe & George E. Smith (2016). The Cambridge Companion to Newton. Cambridge University Press. p. 75. ISBN 9781107015463.
  21. ^ Yoder, Joella G. (1988). Unrolling Time: Christiaan Huygens and the Mathematization of Nature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-34140-0.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Crowell, Benjamin. Light and Matter (an introductory text, uses algebra with optional sections involving calculus)
  • Fitzpatrick, Richard. Classical Mechanics (uses calculus)
  • Hoiland, Paul (2004). Preferred Frames of Reference & Relativity
  • Horbatsch, Marko, "Classical Mechanics Course Notes".
  • Rosu, Haret C., "Classical Mechanics". Physics Education. 1999. [arxiv.org : physics/9909035]
  • Shapiro, Joel A. (2003). Classical Mechanics
  • Sussman, Gerald Jay & Wisdom, Jack & Mayer, Meinhard E. (2001).
  • Tong, David. Classical Dynamics (Cambridge lecture notes on Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formalism)
  • Kinematic Models for Design Digital Library (KMODDL)
    Movies and photos of hundreds of working mechanical-systems models at Cornell University. Also includes an e-book library of classic texts on mechanical design and engineering.
  • Free videos of actual course lectures with links to lecture notes, assignments and exams.
  • Alejandro A. Torassa, On Classical Mechanics

classical, mechanics, textbooks, classical, mechanics, goldstein, classical, mechanics, kibble, berkshire, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, materia. For the textbooks see Classical Mechanics Goldstein and Classical Mechanics Kibble and Berkshire This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Classical mechanics news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Classical mechanics is a physical theory describing the motion of macroscopic objects from projectiles to parts of machinery and astronomical objects such as spacecraft planets stars and galaxies The classical in classical mechanics does not refer to classical antiquity as it might in say classical architecture On the contrary the development of classical mechanics involved substantial change in the methods and philosophy of physics 1 Instead the qualifier distinguishes classical mechanics from physics developed after the revolutions of the early 20th century which revealed limitations of classical mechanics 2 Diagram of orbital motion of a satellite around the Earth showing perpendicular velocity and acceleration force vectors represented through a classical interpretationThe earliest formulation of classical mechanics is often referred to as Newtonian mechanics It consists of the physical concepts based on the 17th century foundational works of Sir Isaac Newton and the mathematical methods invented by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Leonhard Euler and others to describe the motion of bodies under the influence of forces Later methods based on energy were developed by Euler Joseph Louis Lagrange William Rowan Hamilton and others leading to analytical mechanics including Lagrangian mechanics and Hamiltonian mechanics These advances made predominantly in the 18th and 19th centuries extend substantially beyond earlier works they are with some modification used in all areas of modern physics For objects governed by classical mechanics if the present state is known with absolute precision it is possible to predict how it will move in the future determinism and how it has moved in the past reversibility in practice absolute precision is not possible and chaos theory shows that the long term predictions of classical mechanics are not reliable Classical mechanics provides accurate results when studying large objects that are not extremely massive and speeds not approaching the speed of light When the objects being examined have about the size of an atom diameter it becomes necessary to introduce the other major sub field of mechanics quantum mechanics To describe velocities that are not small compared to the speed of light special relativity is needed In cases where objects become extremely massive general relativity becomes applicable However a number of modern sources do include relativistic mechanics in classical physics which in their view represents classical mechanics in its most developed and accurate form Contents 1 Branches 1 1 Traditional division 1 2 Forces vs energy 1 3 By region of application 2 Description of objects and their motion 2 1 Kinematics 2 1 1 Velocity and speed 2 1 2 Acceleration 2 1 3 Frames of reference 3 Newtonian mechanics 3 1 Work and energy 4 Lagrangian mechanics 5 Hamiltonian mechanics 6 Limits of validity 6 1 Newtonian approximation to special relativity 6 2 Classical approximation to quantum mechanics 7 History 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksBranches editTraditional division edit Classical mechanics was traditionally divided into three main branches Statics is the branch of classical mechanics that is concerned with the analysis of force and torque acting on a physical system that does not experience an acceleration but rather is in equilibrium with its environment 3 Kinematics describes the motion of points bodies objects and systems of bodies groups of objects without considering the forces that cause them to move 4 5 3 Kinematics as a field of study is often referred to as the geometry of motion and is occasionally seen as a branch of mathematics 6 7 8 Dynamics goes beyond merely describing objects behavior and also considers the forces which explain it Some authors for example Taylor 2005 9 and Greenwood 1997 10 include special relativity within classical dynamics Forces vs energy edit Another division is based on the choice of mathematical formalism Classical mechanics can be mathematically presented in multiple different ways The physical content of these different formulations is the same but they provide different insights and facilitate different types of calculations While the term Newtonian mechanics is sometimes used as a synonym for non relativistic classical physics it can also refer to a particular formalism based on Newton s laws of motion Newtonian mechanics in this sense emphasizes force as a vector quantity 11 In contrast analytical mechanics uses scalar properties of motion representing the system as a whole usually its kinetic energy and potential energy The equations of motion are derived from the scalar quantity by some underlying principle about the scalar s variation Two dominant branches of analytical mechanics are Lagrangian mechanics which uses generalized coordinates and corresponding generalized velocities in configuration space and Hamiltonian mechanics which uses coordinates and corresponding momenta in phase space Both formulations are equivalent by a Legendre transformation on the generalized coordinates velocities and momenta therefore both contain the same information for describing the dynamics of a system There are other formulations such as Hamilton Jacobi theory Routhian mechanics and Appell s equation of motion All equations of motion for particles and fields in any formalism can be derived from the widely applicable result called the principle of least action One result is Noether s theorem a statement which connects conservation laws to their associated symmetries By region of application edit Alternatively a division can be made by region of application Celestial mechanics relating to stars planets and other celestial bodies Continuum mechanics for materials modelled as a continuum e g solids and fluids i e liquids and gases Relativistic mechanics i e including the special and general theories of relativity for bodies whose speed is close to the speed of light Statistical mechanics which provides a framework for relating the microscopic properties of individual atoms and molecules to the macroscopic or bulk thermodynamic properties of materials Description of objects and their motion edit nbsp The analysis of projectile motion is a part of classical mechanics For simplicity classical mechanics often models real world objects as point particles that is objects with negligible size The motion of a point particle is determined by a small number of parameters its position mass and the forces applied to it Classical mechanics also describes the more complex motions of extended non pointlike objects Euler s laws provide extensions to Newton s laws in this area The concepts of angular momentum rely on the same calculus used to describe one dimensional motion The rocket equation extends the notion of rate of change of an object s momentum to include the effects of an object losing mass These generalizations extensions are derived from Newton s laws say by decomposing a solid body into a collection of points In reality the kind of objects that classical mechanics can describe always have a non zero size The behavior of very small particles such as the electron is more accurately described by quantum mechanics Objects with non zero size have more complicated behavior than hypothetical point particles because of the additional degrees of freedom e g a baseball can spin while it is moving However the results for point particles can be used to study such objects by treating them as composite objects made of a large number of collectively acting point particles The center of mass of a composite object behaves like a point particle Classical mechanics assumes that matter and energy have definite knowable attributes such as location in space and speed Non relativistic mechanics also assumes that forces act instantaneously see also Action at a distance Kinematics edit Main article Kinematics The SI derived mechanical that is not electromagnetic or thermal units with kg m and s position mangular position angle unitless radian velocity m s 1angular velocity s 1acceleration m s 2angular acceleration s 2jerk m s 3 angular jerk s 3specific energy m2 s 2absorbed dose rate m2 s 3moment of inertia kg m2momentum kg m s 1angular momentum kg m2 s 1force kg m s 2torque kg m2 s 2energy kg m2 s 2power kg m2 s 3pressure and energy density kg m 1 s 2surface tension kg s 2spring constant kg s 2irradiance and energy flux kg s 3kinematic viscosity m2 s 1dynamic viscosity kg m 1 s 1density mass density kg m 3specific weight weight density kg m 2 s 2number density m 3action kg m2 s 1The position of a point particle is defined in relation to a coordinate system centered on an arbitrary fixed reference point in space called the origin O A simple coordinate system might describe the position of a particle P with a vector notated by an arrow labeled r that points from the origin O to point P In general the point particle does not need to be stationary relative to O In cases where P is moving relative to O r is defined as a function of t time In pre Einstein relativity known as Galilean relativity time is considered an absolute i e the time interval that is observed to elapse between any given pair of events is the same for all observers 12 In addition to relying on absolute time classical mechanics assumes Euclidean geometry for the structure of space 13 Velocity and speed edit Main articles Velocity and speed The velocity or the rate of change of displacement with time is defined as the derivative of the position with respect to time v drdt displaystyle mathbf v mathrm d mathbf r over mathrm d t nbsp In classical mechanics velocities are directly additive and subtractive For example if one car travels east at 60 km h and passes another car traveling in the same direction at 50 km h the slower car perceives the faster car as traveling east at 60 50 10 km h However from the perspective of the faster car the slower car is moving 10 km h to the west often denoted as 10 km h where the sign implies opposite direction Velocities are directly additive as vector quantities they must be dealt with using vector analysis Mathematically if the velocity of the first object in the previous discussion is denoted by the vector u ud and the velocity of the second object by the vector v ve where u is the speed of the first object v is the speed of the second object and d and e are unit vectors in the directions of motion of each object respectively then the velocity of the first object as seen by the second object is u u v displaystyle mathbf u mathbf u mathbf v nbsp Similarly the first object sees the velocity of the second object as v v u displaystyle mathbf v mathbf v mathbf u nbsp When both objects are moving in the same direction this equation can be simplified to u u v d displaystyle mathbf u u v mathbf d nbsp Or by ignoring direction the difference can be given in terms of speed only u u v displaystyle u u v nbsp Acceleration edit Main article Acceleration The acceleration or rate of change of velocity is the derivative of the velocity with respect to time the second derivative of the position with respect to time a dvdt d2rdt2 displaystyle mathbf a mathrm d mathbf v over mathrm d t mathrm d 2 mathbf r over mathrm d t 2 nbsp Acceleration represents the velocity s change over time Velocity can change in magnitude direction or both Occasionally a decrease in the magnitude of velocity v is referred to as deceleration but generally any change in the velocity over time including deceleration is referred to as acceleration Frames of reference edit Main articles Inertial frame of reference and Galilean transformation While the position velocity and acceleration of a particle can be described with respect to any observer in any state of motion classical mechanics assumes the existence of a special family of reference frames in which the mechanical laws of nature take a comparatively simple form These special reference frames are called inertial frames An inertial frame is an idealized frame of reference within which an object with zero net force acting upon it moves with a constant velocity that is it is either at rest or moving uniformly in a straight line In an inertial frame Newton s law of motion F ma displaystyle F ma nbsp is valid 14 185 Non inertial reference frames accelerate in relation to another inertial frame A body rotating with respect to an inertial frame is not an inertial frame 14 When viewed from an inertial frame particles in the non inertial frame appear to move in ways not explained by forces from existing fields in the reference frame Hence it appears that there are other forces that enter the equations of motion solely as a result of the relative acceleration These forces are referred to as fictitious forces inertia forces or pseudo forces Consider two reference frames S and S For observers in each of the reference frames an event has space time coordinates of x y z t in frame S and x y z t in frame S Assuming time is measured the same in all reference frames if we require x x when t 0 then the relation between the space time coordinates of the same event observed from the reference frames S and S which are moving at a relative velocity u in the x direction is x x tu y y z z t t displaystyle begin aligned x amp x tu y amp y z amp z t amp t end aligned nbsp This set of formulas defines a group transformation known as the Galilean transformation informally the Galilean transform This group is a limiting case of the Poincare group used in special relativity The limiting case applies when the velocity u is very small compared to c the speed of light The transformations have the following consequences v v u the velocity v of a particle from the perspective of S is slower by u than its velocity v from the perspective of S a a the acceleration of a particle is the same in any inertial reference frame F F the force on a particle is the same in any inertial reference frame the speed of light is not a constant in classical mechanics nor does the special position given to the speed of light in relativistic mechanics have a counterpart in classical mechanics For some problems it is convenient to use rotating coordinates reference frames Thereby one can either keep a mapping to a convenient inertial frame or introduce additionally a fictitious centrifugal force and Coriolis force Newtonian mechanics editMain articles Force and Newton s laws of motion A force in physics is any action that causes an object s velocity to change that is to accelerate A force originates from within a field such as an electro static field caused by static electrical charges electro magnetic field caused by moving charges or gravitational field caused by mass among others Newton was the first to mathematically express the relationship between force and momentum Some physicists interpret Newton s second law of motion as a definition of force and mass while others consider it a fundamental postulate a law of nature 15 Either interpretation has the same mathematical consequences historically known as Newton s Second Law F dpdt d mv dt displaystyle mathbf F mathrm d mathbf p over mathrm d t mathrm d m mathbf v over mathrm d t nbsp The quantity mv is called the canonical momentum The net force on a particle is thus equal to the rate of change of the momentum of the particle with time Since the definition of acceleration is a dv dt the second law can be written in the simplified and more familiar form F ma displaystyle mathbf F m mathbf a nbsp So long as the force acting on a particle is known Newton s second law is sufficient to describe the motion of a particle Once independent relations for each force acting on a particle are available they can be substituted into Newton s second law to obtain an ordinary differential equation which is called the equation of motion As an example assume that friction is the only force acting on the particle and that it may be modeled as a function of the velocity of the particle for example FR lv displaystyle mathbf F rm R lambda mathbf v nbsp where l is a positive constant the negative sign states that the force is opposite the sense of the velocity Then the equation of motion is lv ma mdvdt displaystyle lambda mathbf v m mathbf a m mathrm d mathbf v over mathrm d t nbsp This can be integrated to obtain v v0e lt m displaystyle mathbf v mathbf v 0 e lambda t m nbsp where v0 is the initial velocity This means that the velocity of this particle decays exponentially to zero as time progresses In this case an equivalent viewpoint is that the kinetic energy of the particle is absorbed by friction which converts it to heat energy in accordance with the conservation of energy and the particle is slowing down This expression can be further integrated to obtain the position r of the particle as a function of time Important forces include the gravitational force and the Lorentz force for electromagnetism In addition Newton s third law can sometimes be used to deduce the forces acting on a particle if it is known that particle A exerts a force F on another particle B it follows that B must exert an equal and opposite reaction force F on A The strong form of Newton s third law requires that F and F act along the line connecting A and B while the weak form does not Illustrations of the weak form of Newton s third law are often found for magnetic forces clarification needed Work and energy edit Main articles Work physics kinetic energy and potential energy If a constant force F is applied to a particle that makes a displacement Dr note 1 the work done by the force is defined as the scalar product of the force and displacement vectors W F Dr displaystyle W mathbf F cdot Delta mathbf r nbsp More generally if the force varies as a function of position as the particle moves from r1 to r2 along a path C the work done on the particle is given by the line integral W CF r dr displaystyle W int C mathbf F mathbf r cdot mathrm d mathbf r nbsp If the work done in moving the particle from r1 to r2 is the same no matter what path is taken the force is said to be conservative Gravity is a conservative force as is the force due to an idealized spring as given by Hooke s law The force due to friction is non conservative The kinetic energy Ek of a particle of mass m travelling at speed v is given by Ek 12mv2 displaystyle E mathrm k tfrac 1 2 mv 2 nbsp For extended objects composed of many particles the kinetic energy of the composite body is the sum of the kinetic energies of the particles The work energy theorem states that for a particle of constant mass m the total work W done on the particle as it moves from position r1 to r2 is equal to the change in kinetic energy Ek of the particle W DEk Ek2 Ek1 12m v22 v12 displaystyle W Delta E mathrm k E mathrm k 2 E mathrm k 1 tfrac 1 2 m left v 2 2 v 1 2 right nbsp Conservative forces can be expressed as the gradient of a scalar function known as the potential energy and denoted Ep F Ep displaystyle mathbf F mathbf nabla E mathrm p nbsp If all the forces acting on a particle are conservative and Ep is the total potential energy which is defined as a work of involved forces to rearrange mutual positions of bodies obtained by summing the potential energies corresponding to each force F Dr Ep Dr DEp displaystyle mathbf F cdot Delta mathbf r mathbf nabla E mathrm p cdot Delta mathbf r Delta E mathrm p nbsp The decrease in the potential energy is equal to the increase in the kinetic energy DEp DEk D Ek Ep 0 displaystyle Delta E mathrm p Delta E mathrm k Rightarrow Delta E mathrm k E mathrm p 0 nbsp This result is known as conservation of energy and states that the total energy E Ek Ep displaystyle sum E E mathrm k E mathrm p nbsp is constant in time It is often useful because many commonly encountered forces are conservative Lagrangian mechanics editMain article Lagrangian mechanics Lagrangian mechanics is a formulation of classical mechanics founded on the stationary action principle also known as the principle of least action It was introduced by the Italian French mathematician and astronomer Joseph Louis Lagrange in his presentation to the Turin Academy of Science in 1760 16 culminating in his 1788 grand opus Mecanique analytique Lagrangian mechanics describes a mechanical system as a pair M L textstyle M L nbsp consisting of a configuration space M textstyle M nbsp and a smooth function L textstyle L nbsp within that space called a Lagrangian For many systems L T V textstyle L T V nbsp where T textstyle T nbsp and V displaystyle V nbsp are the kinetic and potential energy of the system respectively The stationary action principle requires that the action functional of the system derived from L textstyle L nbsp must remain at a stationary point a maximum minimum or saddle throughout the time evolution of the system This constraint allows the calculation of the equations of motion of the system using Lagrange s equations 17 Hamiltonian mechanics editMain article Hamiltonian mechanics Hamiltonian mechanics emerged in 1833 as a reformulation of Lagrangian mechanics Introduced by Sir William Rowan Hamilton 18 Hamiltonian mechanics replaces generalized velocities q i displaystyle dot q i nbsp used in Lagrangian mechanics with generalized momenta Both theories provide interpretations of classical mechanics and describe the same physical phenomena Hamiltonian mechanics has a close relationship with geometry notably symplectic geometry and Poisson structures and serves as a link between classical and quantum mechanics In this formalism the dynamics of a system are governed by Hamilton s equations which express the time derivatives of position and momentum variables in terms of partial derivatives of a function called the Hamiltonian dqdt H p dpdt H q displaystyle frac mathrm d boldsymbol q mathrm d t frac partial mathcal H partial boldsymbol p quad frac mathrm d boldsymbol p mathrm d t frac partial mathcal H partial boldsymbol q nbsp The Hamiltonian is the Legendre transform of the Lagrangian and in many situations of physical interest it is equal to the total energy of the system Limits of validity edit nbsp Domain of validity for classical mechanicsMany branches of classical mechanics are simplifications or approximations of more accurate forms two of the most accurate being general relativity and relativistic statistical mechanics Geometric optics is an approximation to the quantum theory of light and does not have a superior classical form When both quantum mechanics and classical mechanics cannot apply such as at the quantum level with many degrees of freedom quantum field theory QFT is of use QFT deals with small distances and large speeds with many degrees of freedom as well as the possibility of any change in the number of particles throughout the interaction When treating large degrees of freedom at the macroscopic level statistical mechanics becomes useful Statistical mechanics describes the behavior of large but countable numbers of particles and their interactions as a whole at the macroscopic level Statistical mechanics is mainly used in thermodynamics for systems that lie outside the bounds of the assumptions of classical thermodynamics In the case of high velocity objects approaching the speed of light classical mechanics is enhanced by special relativity In case that objects become extremely heavy i e their Schwarzschild radius is not negligibly small for a given application deviations from Newtonian mechanics become apparent and can be quantified by using the parameterized post Newtonian formalism In that case general relativity GR becomes applicable However until now there is no theory of quantum gravity unifying GR and QFT in the sense that it could be used when objects become extremely small and heavy 4 5 Newtonian approximation to special relativity edit In special relativity the momentum of a particle is given by p mv1 v2c2 displaystyle mathbf p frac m mathbf v sqrt 1 frac v 2 c 2 nbsp where m is the particle s rest mass v its velocity v is the modulus of v and c is the speed of light If v is very small compared to c v2 c2 is approximately zero and so p mv displaystyle mathbf p approx m mathbf v nbsp Thus the Newtonian equation p mv is an approximation of the relativistic equation for bodies moving with low speeds compared to the speed of light For example the relativistic cyclotron frequency of a cyclotron gyrotron or high voltage magnetron is given by f fcm0m0 Tc2 displaystyle f f mathrm c frac m 0 m 0 frac T c 2 nbsp where fc is the classical frequency of an electron or other charged particle with kinetic energy T and rest mass m0 circling in a magnetic field The rest mass of an electron is 511 keV So the frequency correction is 1 for a magnetic vacuum tube with a 5 11 kV direct current accelerating voltage Classical approximation to quantum mechanics edit The ray approximation of classical mechanics breaks down when the de Broglie wavelength is not much smaller than other dimensions of the system For non relativistic particles this wavelength is l hp displaystyle lambda frac h p nbsp where h is the Planck constant and p is the momentum Again this happens with electrons before it happens with heavier particles For example the electrons used by Clinton Davisson and Lester Germer in 1927 accelerated by 54 V had a wavelength of 0 167 nm which was long enough to exhibit a single diffraction side lobe when reflecting from the face of a nickel crystal with atomic spacing of 0 215 nm With a larger vacuum chamber it would seem relatively easy to increase the angular resolution from around a radian to a milliradian and see quantum diffraction from the periodic patterns of integrated circuit computer memory More practical examples of the failure of classical mechanics on an engineering scale are conduction by quantum tunneling in tunnel diodes and very narrow transistor gates in integrated circuits Classical mechanics is the same extreme high frequency approximation as geometric optics It is more often accurate because it describes particles and bodies with rest mass These have more momentum and therefore shorter De Broglie wavelengths than massless particles such as light with the same kinetic energies History editMain article History of classical mechanics For a chronological guide see Timeline of classical mechanics The study of the motion of bodies is an ancient one making classical mechanics one of the oldest and largest subjects in science engineering and technology The development of classical mechanics lead to the development of many areas of mathematics 19 54 Some Greek philosophers of antiquity among them Aristotle founder of Aristotelian physics may have been the first to maintain the idea that everything happens for a reason and that theoretical principles can assist in the understanding of nature While to a modern reader many of these preserved ideas come forth as eminently reasonable there is a conspicuous lack of both mathematical theory and controlled experiment as we know it These later became decisive factors in forming modern science and their early application came to be known as classical mechanics In his Elementa super demonstrationem ponderum medieval mathematician Jordanus de Nemore introduced the concept of positional gravity and the use of component forces nbsp Three stage Theory of impetus according to Albert of SaxonyThe first published causal explanation of the motions of planets was Johannes Kepler s Astronomia nova published in 1609 He concluded based on Tycho Brahe s observations on the orbit of Mars that the planet s orbits were ellipses This break with ancient thought was happening around the same time that Galileo was proposing abstract mathematical laws for the motion of objects He may or may not have performed the famous experiment of dropping two cannonballs of different weights from the tower of Pisa showing that they both hit the ground at the same time The reality of that particular experiment is disputed but he did carry out quantitative experiments by rolling balls on an inclined plane His theory of accelerated motion was derived from the results of such experiments and forms a cornerstone of classical mechanics In 1673 Christiaan Huygens described in his Horologium Oscillatorium the first two laws of motion 20 The work is also the first modern treatise in which a physical problem the accelerated motion of a falling body is idealized by a set of parameters then analyzed mathematically and constitutes one of the seminal works of applied mathematics 21 nbsp Sir Isaac Newton 1643 1727 an influential figure in the history of physics and whose three laws of motion form the basis of classical mechanicsNewton founded his principles of natural philosophy on three proposed laws of motion the law of inertia his second law of acceleration mentioned above and the law of action and reaction and hence laid the foundations for classical mechanics Both Newton s second and third laws were given the proper scientific and mathematical treatment in Newton s Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica Here they are distinguished from earlier attempts at explaining similar phenomena which were either incomplete incorrect or given little accurate mathematical expression Newton also enunciated the principles of conservation of momentum and angular momentum In mechanics Newton was also the first to provide the first correct scientific and mathematical formulation of gravity in Newton s law of universal gravitation The combination of Newton s laws of motion and gravitation provides the fullest and most accurate description of classical mechanics He demonstrated that these laws apply to everyday objects as well as to celestial objects In particular he obtained a theoretical explanation of Kepler s laws of motion of the planets Newton had previously invented the calculus however the Principia was formulated entirely in terms of long established geometric methods in emulation of Euclid Newton and most of his contemporaries with the notable exception of Huygens worked on the assumption that classical mechanics would be able to explain all phenomena including light in the form of geometric optics Even when discovering the so called Newton s rings a wave interference phenomenon he maintained his own corpuscular theory of light nbsp Lagrange s contribution was realising Newton s ideas in the language of modern mathematics now called Lagrangian mechanics After Newton classical mechanics became a principal field of study in mathematics as well as physics Mathematical formulations progressively allowed finding solutions to a far greater number of problems The first notable mathematical treatment was in 1788 by Joseph Louis Lagrange Lagrangian mechanics was in turn re formulated in 1833 by William Rowan Hamilton nbsp Hamilton developed an alternative to Lagrangian mechanics now called Hamiltonian mechanics Some difficulties were discovered in the late 19th century that could only be resolved by more modern physics Some of these difficulties related to compatibility with electromagnetic theory and the famous Michelson Morley experiment The resolution of these problems led to the special theory of relativity often still considered a part of classical mechanics A second set of difficulties were related to thermodynamics When combined with thermodynamics classical mechanics leads to the Gibbs paradox of classical statistical mechanics in which entropy is not a well defined quantity Black body radiation was not explained without the introduction of quanta As experiments reached the atomic level classical mechanics failed to explain even approximately such basic things as the energy levels and sizes of atoms and the photo electric effect The effort at resolving these problems led to the development of quantum mechanics Since the end of the 20th century classical mechanics in physics has no longer been an independent theory Instead classical mechanics is now considered an approximate theory to the more general quantum mechanics Emphasis has shifted to understanding the fundamental forces of nature as in the Standard Model and its more modern extensions into a unified theory of everything Classical mechanics is a theory useful for the study of the motion of non quantum mechanical low energy particles in weak gravitational fields See also edit nbsp Physics portalDynamical system List of equations in classical mechanics List of publications in classical mechanics List of textbooks on classical mechanics and quantum mechanics Molecular dynamics Newton s laws of motion Special relativity Quantum mechanics Quantum field theoryNotes edit The displacement Dr is the difference of the particle s initial and final positions Dr rfinal rinitial References edit Ben Chaim Michael 2004 Experimental Philosophy and the Birth of Empirical Science Boyle Locke and Newton Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 0 7546 4091 4 OCLC 53887772 Agar Jon 2012 Science in the Twentieth Century and Beyond Cambridge Polity Press ISBN 978 0 7456 3469 2 a b Thomas Wallace Wright 1896 Elements of Mechanics Including Kinematics Kinetics and Statics with applications E and F N Spon p 85 Edmund Taylor Whittaker 1904 A Treatise on the Analytical Dynamics of Particles and Rigid Bodies Cambridge University Press Chapter 1 ISBN 0 521 35883 3 Joseph Stiles Beggs 1983 Kinematics Taylor amp Francis p 1 ISBN 0 89116 355 7 Russell C Hibbeler 2009 Kinematics and kinetics of a particle Engineering Mechanics Dynamics 12th ed Prentice Hall p 298 ISBN 978 0 13 607791 6 Ahmed A Shabana 2003 Reference kinematics Dynamics of Multibody Systems 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54411 5 P P Teodorescu 2007 Kinematics Mechanical Systems Classical Models Particle Mechanics Springer p 287 ISBN 978 1 4020 5441 9 John Robert Taylor 2005 Classical Mechanics University Science Books ISBN 978 1 891389 22 1 Donald T Greenwood 1997 Classical Mechanics Reprint of 1977 ed Courier Dover Publications p 1 ISBN 0 486 69690 1 Lanczos Cornelius 1970 The variational principles of mechanics 4th ed New York Dover Publications Inc Introduction pp xxi xxix ISBN 0 486 65067 7 Knudsen Jens M Hjorth Poul 2012 Elements of Newtonian Mechanics illustrated ed Springer Science amp Business Media p 30 ISBN 978 3 642 97599 8 Extract of page 30 MIT physics 8 01 lecture notes page 12 Archived 2013 07 09 at the Library of Congress Web Archives PDF a b Goldstein Herbert 1950 Classical Mechanics 1st ed Addison Wesley Thornton Stephen T Marion Jerry B 2004 Classical dynamics of particles and systems 5 ed Belmont CA Brooks Cole pp 50 ISBN 978 0 534 40896 1 Fraser Craig 1983 J L Lagrange s Early Contributions to the Principles and Methods of Mechanics Archive for History of Exact Sciences 28 3 197 241 JSTOR 41133689 Hand L N Finch J D 1998 Analytical Mechanics 2nd ed Cambridge University Press pp 18 20 23 46 51 ISBN 9780521575720 Hamilton William Rowan 1833 On a general method of expressing the paths of light amp of the planets by the coefficients of a characteristic function Printed by P D Hardy OCLC 68159539 Doran Chris Lasenby Anthony N 2003 Geometric algebra for physicists Cambridge New York Cambridge university press ISBN 978 0 521 48022 2 Rob Iliffe amp George E Smith 2016 The Cambridge Companion to Newton Cambridge University Press p 75 ISBN 9781107015463 Yoder Joella G 1988 Unrolling Time Christiaan Huygens and the Mathematization of Nature Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 34140 0 Further reading editAlonso M Finn J 1992 Fundamental University Physics Addison Wesley Feynman Richard 1999 The Feynman Lectures on Physics Perseus Publishing ISBN 978 0 7382 0092 7 Feynman Richard Phillips Richard 1998 Six Easy Pieces Perseus Publishing ISBN 978 0 201 32841 7 Goldstein Herbert Charles P Poole John L Safko 2002 Classical Mechanics 3rd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 65702 9 Kibble Tom W B Berkshire Frank H 2004 Classical Mechanics 5th ed Imperial College Press ISBN 978 1 86094 424 6 Kleppner D Kolenkow R J 1973 An Introduction to Mechanics McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 035048 9 Landau L D Lifshitz E M 1972 Course of Theoretical Physics Vol 1 Mechanics Franklin Book Company ISBN 978 0 08 016739 8 Morin David 2008 Introduction to Classical Mechanics With Problems and Solutions 1st ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 87622 3 Gerald Jay Sussman Jack Wisdom 2001 Structure and Interpretation of Classical Mechanics MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 19455 6 O Donnell Peter J 2015 Essential Dynamics and Relativity CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4665 8839 4 Thornton Stephen T Marion Jerry B 2003 Classical Dynamics of Particles and Systems 5th ed Brooks Cole ISBN 978 0 534 40896 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Classical mechanics nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Classical mechanics Crowell Benjamin Light and Matter an introductory text uses algebra with optional sections involving calculus Fitzpatrick Richard Classical Mechanics uses calculus Hoiland Paul 2004 Preferred Frames of Reference amp Relativity Horbatsch Marko Classical Mechanics Course Notes Rosu Haret C Classical Mechanics Physics Education 1999 arxiv org physics 9909035 Shapiro Joel A 2003 Classical Mechanics Sussman Gerald Jay amp Wisdom Jack amp Mayer Meinhard E 2001 Structure and Interpretation of Classical Mechanics Tong David Classical Dynamics Cambridge lecture notes on Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formalism Kinematic Models for Design Digital Library KMODDL Movies and photos of hundreds of working mechanical systems models at Cornell University Also includes an e book library of classic texts on mechanical design and engineering MIT OpenCourseWare 8 01 Classical Mechanics Free videos of actual course lectures with links to lecture notes assignments and exams Alejandro A Torassa On Classical Mechanics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Classical mechanics amp oldid 1214959245, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.