Christiaan Huygens (1670) - Virtual Tour of Dutch History (sitios de interés)

Descripción del sitio

Huygens, Christiaan (1629-1695) Dutch physicist who was the leading proponent of the wave theory of light. The wave theory, however, was supported by the observation that two intersecting beams of light did not bounce off each other as would be expected if they were composed of particles. In contradiction to Newton, Huygens correctly believed that light must travel more slowly when it is refracted towards the normal, although this was not proven until experiments by Foucault in the nineteenth century. Huygens also made important contributions to mechanics, stating that in a collision between bodies, neither loses nor gains "motion" (his term for momentum ). He stated that the center of gravity moves uniformly in a straight line, and gave the expression for centrifugal force as Additionally, he studied pendula. He discovered Titan and was the first to correctly identify the observed elongation of Saturn as the presence of Saturn's rings. Huygens was also the mentor of Leibniz in math and mechanics. Huygenshuygens_bg.jpg

Mapa del lugar de interés Christiaan Huygens (1670)

Panorámica interactiva con Google Street View

fotografía panorámica de Christiaan Huygens (1670), con el API de Google Street View

Mapas de contenido relacionado