Transcription of Classical Mechanics
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ClassicalMechanicsAnintroductorycourseRi chardFitzpatrickAssociateProfessor ofPhysicsTheUniversity :.. classicalmechanics?.. xes.. cant gures..122 Motionin1 ..263 Motionin3 .. parallelogram..444 Newton' .. 's rstlawofmotion.. 'ssecondlawofmotion.. 'slaw.. 'sthirdlawofmotion.. ,pulleys,andinclines.. elds.. 'slaw.. general1-dimensionalpotential.. rotationa vector?.. pointparticle.. multi-componentsystem.. laminarobjectina gravitational eld.. stretchedstring.. :ThesourceswhichI consultedmostfrequentlywhilstdevelopingt hiscourseare: ,Thirdedition(Holt,Rinehart,& Winston,NewYorkNY, 1977). , , ,Fourthedition, (JohnWiley& Sons,NewYorkNY, 1992).
Classical mechanics is the study of the motion of bodies (including the special case in which bodies remain at rest) in accordance with the general principles rst enunciated by Sir Isaac Newton in his Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Math-ematica (1687), commonly known as the Principia. Classical mechanics was the
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