English, asked by prayakhiDas, 5 months ago

what according to newton was responsible for the orbits of the moon and the planets bring ellipses​

Answers

Answered by bineswarbodosa
0

Answer:

Gravity

Explanation:

the planets move in ellipses, not straight lines; therefore, some force must be bending their paths. That force, Newton proposed, was gravity. In Newton's time, gravity was something associated with Earth alone.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

Newton’s laws of motion show that objects at rest will stay at rest and those in motion will continue moving uniformly in a straight line unless acted upon by a force. Thus, it is the straight line that defines the most natural state of motion.

But the planets move in ellipses, not straight lines; therefore, some force must be bending their paths. That force, Newton proposed, was gravity.

In Newton’s time, gravity was something associated with Earth alone. Everyday experience shows us that Earth exerts a gravitational force upon objects at its surface. If you drop something, it accelerates toward Earth as it falls. Newton’s insight was that Earth’s gravity might extend as far as the Moon and produce the force required to curve the Moon’s path from a straight line and keep it in its orbit.

He further hypothesized that gravity is not limited to Earth, but that there is a general force of attraction between all material bodies. If so, the attractive force between the Sun and each of the planets could keep them in their orbits. (This may seem part of our everyday thinking today, but it was a remarkable insight in Newton’s time.)

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