Newton's second law is so intuitively obvious

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Newton's second law, often expressed as F=ma, was a significant advancement because it demonstrated the practical application of calculus to describe physical phenomena. While the direct proportionality of force to mass and acceleration may seem intuitive, the nature of this relationship was not previously understood, leading to questions about why force does not increase as the square of mass. Newton's formulation was rooted in empirical experimentation, building on the work of predecessors like Galileo, yet it cannot be "proved" in the mathematical sense; it can only be tested against reality. The law's historical context reveals that Newton did not originate all aspects of his laws but rather synthesized existing knowledge and experiments. Ultimately, the second law represents a foundational principle in physics that continues to influence scientific inquiry.
  • #61
Hi Guys

Love the turn this thread had taken. I think that textbook by Landau is under-appreciated.

The relevance of the PLA is not that its subject to direct experimental verification, its that its required for Noethers Theorem to apply which gives the most elegant basis of CM. Its validity is most readily established from the axioms of Quantum Mechanics (its in tons of textbooks eg my go-to QM textbook Ballentine - QM - A Modern Development). Forces are definitely more intuitive and amenable to direct experimental verification - but beauty and elegance goes to the PLA version.

For what its worth I think its important to understand what's going on with both approaches. But as far as fundamental physics is concerned my nod goes to the PLA. The reason is that the PLA and Galilean Relativity leads to CM. The two axioms of QM (from which the PLA follows) and Galilean Relativity leads to Schrodinger equation etc ie non relativistic QM. The real essence of non relativistic physics is Galilean Relativity ie the POR and absolute time or, equivalently, an infinite speed effects can propagate - Landau is very careful to make clear that is foundational to the whole thing.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #62
A.T. said:
By assumption of Hooke's law? I guess you have to assume / postulate some parts.

Hooks law is an experimental observation regarding the behavior of springs - its not really a foundational law. Its not really a law because springs and similar things do not behave precisely that way - it more along the lines of Ohms Law. It tells us how resistors behave. Well what's a resistor - a device that to good approximation obeys Ohms law. So what's it's physical content? Its that things, we will call resistors, exist that to good approximation Ohms law applies to. And indeed from a simple model it can be justified. The same with Hooks law - its pretty easy to see the parallel.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #63
Under-appreciated? At the third edition and in stock at Amazon? Hmm.
 
  • #64
voko said:
Under-appreciated? At the third edition and in stock at Amazon? Hmm.

In terms of people discussing it.

I think Landau is well known to physics aficionados - at sort of a more advanced level of Feynman's Lectures.

I fell in love with Landau and physics in general from that book - like the shameless glowing review I quoted - it nearly made me weep when I first read it - it had that big an impact. I thought - this is what physics REALLY is about - beauty laid bare - like Euclid laid Geometry bare.

As you probably guessed I am more of the mathematical physics bent.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #65
bhobba said:
Hooks law is an experimental observation regarding the behavior of springs - its not really a foundational law. Its not really a law because springs and similar things do not behave precisely that way
All you need to assume is that the same force applied to the same object causes the same deformation in any frame. Since classically the size of objects is frame independent too, this leads to the frame independence of forces, which stevendaryl asked about.
 
  • #66
bhobba said:
As you probably guessed I am more of the mathematical physics bent.

This is most interesting. In his original preface to the first Russian edition (1940, sans Lifshitz) he clearly delineated theoretical physics from mathematical physics. His book is on theoretical physics :)
 
  • #67
A.T. said:
All you need to assume is that the same force applied to the same object causes the same deformation in any frame. Since classically the size of objects is frame independent too, this leads to the frame independence of forces, which stevendaryl asked about.

Yea - its very reasonable - just like Ohms law is very reasonable.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #68
harrylin said:
Your first post on Landau ("actually derive all of Classical Mechanics") implied that Landau derives Hooke's law. But I did not see that.

Sorry for any confusion. I did not mean to imply you can derive Hooks law from the PLA - you cant.

What you derive is the generalized force law. Landau assumes, for fundamental forces, it has the form of a conservative force. But in QM you can actually derive that as well.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #69
harrylin said:
Your first post on Landau ("actually derive all of Classical Mechanics") implied that Landau derives Hooke's law. But I did not see that. Perhaps I overlooked it. Or perhaps you slightly overestimate that book? :wink:

Granted, "derived all of classical mechanics" is an overstatement, to put it mildly. There is much in classical mechanics that he did not touch upon at all, including such venerable subjects as statics.

As far as Hooke's law is concerned, he actually derived it, without using the name, in the section on small oscillations, where he showed that any potential energy at small deviations from equilibrium is approximated by ## \frac k 2 (q - q_0)^2 ##. Note he actually derived it, not postulated as is done in some other texts.
 
  • #70
voko said:
As far as Hooke's law is concerned, he actually derived it, without using the name, in the section on small oscillations, where he showed that any potential energy at small deviations from equilibrium is approximated by ## \frac k 2 (q - q_0)^2 ##. Note he actually derived it, not postulated as is done in some other texts.

Yea - that is the most elegant justification for it - its simply what's required for small deformations from a Taylor's expansion - derived - yes - but exactly where it starts to deviate from that approximation is an experimental matter.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #71
voko said:
This is most interesting. In his original preface to the first Russian edition (1940, sans Lifshitz) he clearly delineated theoretical physics from mathematical physics. His book is on theoretical physics :)

Interesting - just checked my well worn third edition and its not there.

Maybe I am more of a theoretical physicist - I don't know - my undergrad degree was in applied math and it just gelled so beautifully with that in my mind. At the root of a lot of math is symmetry - that physics was the same hit me like a thunderbolt.

Thanks
Bill
 
  • #72
voko said:
Granted, "derived all of classical mechanics" is an overstatement, to put it mildly. There is much in classical mechanics that he did not touch upon at all, including such venerable subjects as statics.

As far as Hooke's law is concerned, he actually derived it, without using the name, in the section on small oscillations, where he showed that any potential energy at small deviations from equilibrium is approximated by ## \frac k 2 (q - q_0)^2 ##. Note he actually derived it, not postulated as is done in some other texts.
Oh that's neat indeed! :smile:
 
  • #73
stevendaryl said:
Okay, that's a nice argument, but it implicitly makes the assumption that a force has the same magnitude in all frames of reference. How is that justified?
It is the same constant force that is seen to be constant in all frames. The force is constant because there is no change in the thing supplying the force. For example, a spring that is kept stretched to a constant distance; a very heavy weight that drops very slowly and supplies a force through a gear mechanism.

AM
 
  • #74
Andrew Mason said:
It is the same constant force that is seen to be constant in all frames. The force is constant because there is no change in the thing supplying the force. For example, a spring that is kept stretched to a constant distance; a very heavy weight that drops very slowly and supplies a force through a gear mechanism.

AM

But in Special Relativity, a force doesn't have the same magnitude in every reference frame. So to assume that it has the same magnitude in every reference frame is not an immediate consequence of the equivalence of all reference frames.
 
  • #75
stevendaryl said:
But in Special Relativity, a force doesn't have the same magnitude in every reference frame. So to assume that it has the same magnitude in every reference frame is not an immediate consequence of the equivalence of all reference frames.
But Galilean relativity does not apply in SR where time and space are not absolute. Those are premises in Galilean relativity.

In Galilean relativity all measurements of the thing supplying the force are identical in all IFRs while in SR they are not. For example, in Galilean relativity a spring stretched a certain distance as measured in one IFR is stretched the same distance in all IFRs. Not so in special relativity.

AM
 
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