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Newton's Third law of Motion:

By: Shafin Alam

History of Newton's third law:

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Isaac Newton formed the third law as well as the other laws of motion from extending on the work done by Galileo, who lived before him. Newton had published the law in his famous book called philosophiae naturalis principia mathmatica (in latin), commonly known as the principia. In his book, he explains the experiment he conducts in order to form the third law of motion. In the experiment, he collided together two pendulums of different mass into each other and found out that they both rebound the same force as each other. Thus from this experiment Newton derived the third law and it became a part of the three laws of motion we know today.

What is Newton's third law of motion?

Newton's third law of motion is commonly known as the conservation of momentum. This is the preservance of energy/force through the interaction of a medium or object which transfer natural energy. The law demonstrates that when force is emitted through a medium/object, the first and second matter both experience the same magnitude of force, reflected in the opposite direction to each other. Throughout our daily lives forces always occur in pairs. Newtons third law teaches us about the conservation of energy via matter, and that a body can not excrete a force unless it's touched by a force itself. In the following is a diagram that illustrates Newtons third law.

Sources used in presentation:

Sources

https://byjus.com/physics/newtons-third-law-motion/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton's_laws_of_motion

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