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Was
Isaac Newton really hit in the head with an apple?
BY LAURIE L. DOVE
In 1666, the
Great Plague of London was in full swing, killing scores of residents and
causing others to flee to outlying areas.
Among them
was Isaac Newton, who left Cambridge for
Woolsthorpe Manor, the pastoral home of his mother.
In his new
surroundings, Isaac continued to puzzle over the moon's orbit around Earth.
As he lounged
under an apple tree in the family garden, he was hit in the head with a falling
apple and -- eureka --he discovered gravity.
Newton's apple
is one of the most popular and enduring anecdotes in scientific history, told
to school children and repeated in educational books.
But did it
actually happen? It's true that Newton left London, as did many people at the
time, in an effort to escape the plague [source: The National Archives].
It's also true
that he took refuge at his childhood home and spent time in its garden, where
there was reportedly at least one apple tree.
His discovery
of gravity, however, was more likely the result of many moments of research and
reflection rather than just one moment in which an apple bonked him on the
head.
Although
Newton never recorded the exact moment he discovered gravity, a few of his
colleagues came close.
William
Stukeley, who recounted walking with Newton in the family garden and drinking
tea under the shade of an apple tree, wrote one such account.
Stukeley, who
also penned one of Newton's earliest biographies, recalled a discussion with
Newton about the notion of gravity, one in which Newton pointed to a nearby
apple on a branch as an example.
Newton
wondered why the apple should always fall to the ground, rather than fall
sideways or upward when it released from the branch.
The answer,
Newton said, is that the earth attracts the apple using a yet-unnamed force.
Thanks to Newton, this force would later become known as gravity [source: Stukeley].
Newton himself
was fond of telling the apple anecdote, especially in his later years. However,
historians suspect that by then he had honed the tale in such a way that it
succinctly illustrated his discovery of gravity, boiling it down so that it was
easy to digest [source: Connor].
A more accurate description of Newton's gravity discovery may
come from something he said near the end of his life: "I do not know
what I may appear to the world; but to myself I seem to have been only like a
boy playing on the seashore, and diverting myself now and then in finding a
smoother pebble or prettier shell than ordinary, while the great ocean of truth
lay all undiscovered before me" [source: Biography].
Laurie
L. Dove is an award-winning journalist who covers timely topics for
HowStuffWorks. She is the author of six books and the former owner of a
newspaper and magazine. When not reporting on the latest tech breakthrough,
health advance or economic development, Dove is tracking down hidden history,
science innovations and biologic discoveries. As the Honorable Laurie Dove,
Mayor, she has brought multi-million-dollar improvements to the small Midwest
town where she lives with her husband, five children and two Akitas.
Was Newton hit on the head with an apple? Probably not, but it's a good way to teach children about gravity. |
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