- De motu
antiquiora ("The
Older Writings on Motion"), or
simply De Motu, is
Galileo Galilei's
early written work on
motion (not to be
confused with Newton's...
-
exceeded one-tenth of a
pulse beat." In 1589–1592,
Galileo wrote De Motu
Antiquiora, an
unpublished m****cript on the
motion of
falling bodies.[citation needed]...
- (1586; in Italian: La Bilancetta) On
Motion (c. 1590; in Latin: De Motu
Antiquiora)
Mechanics (c. 1600; in Italian: Le Meccaniche) The
Operations of Geometrical...
-
corresponding to
staying stationary in that
frame of reference. De motu
antiquiora and Two New
Sciences (the
earliest modern investigations of the motion...
- via The
Latin Library. Haec ipsa
insula saepe iam
cultores mutauit. Vt
antiquiora, quae
uetustas obduxit, transeam,
Phocide relicta Graii qui nunc M****iliam...
- of Pisa
experiment Phases of
Venus Celatone Thermoscope Works De motu
antiquiora (1589–1592)
Sidereus Nuncius (1610)
Letters on
Sunspots (1613) Letter...
- of Pisa
experiment Phases of
Venus Celatone Thermoscope Works De motu
antiquiora (1589–1592)
Sidereus Nuncius (1610)
Letters on
Sunspots (1613) Letter...
-
indicated the
particular results that led to the time-squared law. De Motu
Antiquiora (Galileo's
earliest investigations of the
motion of
falling bodies) (Drake...
- Ugas 2006, p. 13-19. "Haec ipsa
insula saepe iam
cultores mutauit. Vt
antiquiora, quae
uetustas obduxit, transeam,
Phocide relicta Graii qui nunc M****iliam...
- Beings'), or De motu cordis, a 1628 book
published by
William Harvey De Motu
Antiquiora ('The
Older Writings on Motion'), or
simply De Motu,
Galileo Galilei's...