Opticks

work by Newton

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Assorted References

  • colour wheel
    • colour wheel
      In colour wheel

      …first in his 1704 book Opticks. During his famed prism experiments, Newton discovered that by refracting sunlight onto a wall, white light was made of seven visible colours: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. He then organized the seven hues into a wheel in the order that they…

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  • discussed in biography
  • history of science
    • Earth's Place in the Universe. Introduction: The History of the Solar System. Aristotle's Philosophical Universe. Ptolemy's Geocentric Cosmos. Copernicus' Heliocentric System. Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion.
      In history of science: The diffusion of scientific method

      …masterpiece of experimental physics, the Opticks, published in 1704, in which he showed how to examine a subject experimentally and discover the laws concealed therein. Newton showed how judicious use of hypotheses could open the way to further experimental investigation until a coherent theory was achieved. The Opticks was to…

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  • science of optics
    • Large Hadron Collider
      In physical science: Science from the Enlightenment to the 20th century

      …the experimental approach of the Opticks became models for scientists of the 18th and 19th centuries. Celestial mechanics developed in the wake of his Principia, extending its scope and refining its mathematical methods. The more qualitative, experimental, and hypothetical approach of Newton’s Opticks influenced the sciences of optics, electricity and…

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    • Large Hadron Collider
      In physical science: Chemistry

      …of its viewpoint from the Opticks and especially the “Queries” with which that work ends. Newton’s suggestion of a hierarchy of clusters of unalterable particles formed by virtue of the specific attractions of its component particles led directly to comparative studies of interactions and thus to the tables of affinities…

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views on

    • atoms
    • light
      • visible spectrum of light
        In light: Early particle and wave theories

        …of light, ultimately asserting in Opticks (1704) that light consists of a stream of corpuscles, or particles. To reconcile his particle model with the known law of refraction, Newton speculated that transparent objects (such as glass) exert attractive forces on the particles, with the consequence that the speed of light…

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