Isaac Newton was born in Woolsthorpe, Lincolnshire, in 1642 and died in London in 1727. The English physicist and mathematician earlier in his career decided to devote himself to the reading of the Treaties of philosophy, natural science and mathematics of the most important thinkers and scientists of the time. From 1684 to 1686 he devoted himself to the writing of the work "Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica", better known as "Principia," which was published in 1687 In 1671, it was welcomed among the members of the Royal Society of London and in 1703 it became president. His main work on the theory of light, "Opticks", was published in 1704 With the gradual adoption of scientific discoveries and the method of Newtonian research …show more content…
Also connected these findings associating the refractive index to the primary colors and discovered some phenomena of interference of light. In 1666 he wrote the short treatise "A New Theory about Light and Colours", in which he articulated the assumptions on colors already made in the …show more content…
He also calculated the centripetal force needed to hold a stone in a sling in rotation and the ratio between the length and the period of oscillation of a pendulum. These early observations were not exploited by Newton, though he had dealt with astronomy and the problems relating to the motion of the