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Leonardo da Vinci’s experiments explored gravity as a form of acceleration

214 points| PikelEmi | 3 years ago |caltech.edu | reply

70 comments

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[+] n4r9|3 years ago|reply
I may be missing something here, but there's a conceptual leap from "the acceleration produced by gravitational force" to "gravity as a form of acceleration".

Da Vinci certainly appears to be exploring the former. The latter was Einstein's great insight. I don't see much in the article to persuade me that da Vinci was equating gravity and acceleration in the way Einstein did, and so the title seems a little too suggestive.

[+] mannykannot|3 years ago|reply
Indeed; this seems to be an extreme example of what might be called the "whig history of science", which interprets the past in the light of what we know today, attributing, to historical figures, modern concepts which they surely never even conceived of, and which would undoubtedly baffle them until they had been brought up-to-date with current knowledge.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whig_history

[+] photochemsyn|3 years ago|reply
Someone has already incorporated this into the wiki entry for historical development of gravitational theory, which may or may not be entirely justified:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_gravitational_theor...

That's an interesting article, including some challenges to Aristotle's views and gravity-related concepts introduced by Indian and Islamic scholars of the 6th - 12th century eras or so.

[+] red_trumpet|3 years ago|reply
Well, thinking of gravity as a force is Newtonian mechanics, which was also not available to da Vinci.
[+] codethief|3 years ago|reply
> "gravity as a form of acceleration". […] The latter was Einstein's great insight. […] equating gravity and acceleration in the way Einstein did

This sounds like a gross misinterpretation of what Einstein said.

Einstein's great insight was that gravity defines inertial (i.e. non-accelerated) frames of reference. Put differently, in free fall you are not in an accelerated frame, despite what an outside observer on the surface of Earth might say. This is commonly abbreviated by "All massive bodies follow the same (inertial) trajectories in the presence of gravity, irrespective of their constitution", which is the Equivalence Principle.

What you are maybe referring to is what an observer experiences who stands still on the surface of a massive body: They can't free-fall, and so they're not in an inertial frame (= the thing defined by gravity) and thus actually accelerate upwards from the point of view of spacetime.

[+] coldtea|3 years ago|reply
>I don't see much in the article to persuade me that da Vinci was equating gravity and acceleration in the way Einstein did

Thinking of the effect on speed of things falling down as acceleration (as opposed to constant), and even coming up with a formula, is already a bridge between these two things.

[+] lamontcg|3 years ago|reply
Yeah, this is just high school Newtonian physics where we should have all learned the concept of gravitational acceleration.
[+] razor_router|3 years ago|reply
agreed, there's no evidence is there that suggests Da Vinci was equating gravity and acceleration in a similar way to Einstein
[+] hummus_bae|3 years ago|reply
Early on in my physics career, my supervisor asked me to keep in mind “it’s about speed, not velocity” when doing calculations. In general a force is a change in momentum, i.e. a change in speed. Acceleration is a change in speed relative to some frame. It’s quite possible that da Vinci may unknowingly have seen gravity as an acceleration (as in my example above) and taken the next step to seeing it as a change in speed.
[+] rerdavies|3 years ago|reply
Umm.

But the water droplets/sand particles do NOT form a straight line if you accelerate the jug. You have to decelerate the jug with exactly the right timing to form a straight line, not accelerate it. Nor do the beads in the Caltech video form a straight line, despite their dishonest attempt to arbitrarily impose a straight line on beads that are clearly not in a straight line.

In the second diagram, which is alleged to be an attempt to plot acceleration due to gravity to the position of an accelerating water jug, the values [0,1,2,4,8] are marked on the x-axis, and [0,-1,-2,-4,-8] on the y-axis. Da Vinci then plots lines from [0,-8] to the points (0,0),(1,0),(2,0),(4,0),(8,0). Doing so doesn't really establish any sort of relationship between accelerating jugs and acceleration due to gravity, even allowing for an incorrect equation of motion for an accelerating object.

Da Vinci spent most of his early career trying to sell military technology to potential patrons (largely if not completely unsuccessfully). One of the pieces of technologies he was trying to sell was a process for calculating improved artillery range tables (tables of elevation vs. range). He didn't manage to sell that either.

The second diagram is more easily interpreted as a doodle that makes an unsuccessful attempt to scry a relationship between elevation and range for artillery pieces.

[+] SamBam|3 years ago|reply
> You have to decelerate the jug with exactly the right timing to form a straight line, not accelerate it.

---

Edit: The quote above, and my original comment below, are wrong. The article is correct. Accelerating the jug at g will create a straight line.

Corrected acceleration model: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/805927382/

Thank you hannasanarion for the correction.

Indeed, this can be thought of intuitively (though it is slightly counter-intuitive): as the article says, if the jug is moving at a constant speed, the drops will actually make a vertical line under the jug. This is because each drop will be move with the same horizontal speed as the jug.

A decelerating jug, as proposed above, would actually create a backwards line or curve. The drops at the bottom works actually be ahead of the jug.

An accelerating jug is the only way you can get the bottom drops behind the jug.

---

My previous comment:

Indeed.

I was pretty sure this was correct, but wanted to model it to confirm. On a Chromebook right now, so Scratch was the easiest way to model and share:

Accelerating jug (cat): https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/805898350/

Decelerating jug: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/805899100/

[+] coda_|3 years ago|reply
That's what I thought as well... But I think what the diagram isn't showing is that the drops are actually moving horizontally to the left at the speed that the jug was moving at the time the drop left the jug. This means each one is moving to the left slightly faster than the one before it... And as they fall this creates an increasing horizontal distance between them... The line is kept at a constant angle due to the fact that the earlier drops are falling downward slightly faster than the later drops. The horizontal and vertical difference between the adjacent drops maintains a 1 to 1 ratio.
[+] s1artibartfast|3 years ago|reply
>But the water droplets/sand particles do NOT form a straight line if you accelerate the jug. You have to decelerate the jug with exactly the right timing to form a straight line, not accelerate it.

You can make a right triangle via either acceleration or deceleration at the same rate as gravity. However, you can only make an Isosceles Right Triangle with acceleration

Vertical position is a function of t^2. If you have constant horizontal velocity, you get a concave curve like this: https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=Y%3D-1x%5E2

Accelerating the horizontal velocity leads to a triangle like this: https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=Y%3D-x

[+] credit_guy|3 years ago|reply
> "What we saw is that Leonardo wrestled with this, but he modeled it as the falling object's distance was proportional to 2 to the t power [with t representing time] instead proportional to t squared," Roh says. "It's wrong, but we later found out that he used this sort of wrong equation in the correct way." In his notes, da Vinci illustrated an object falling for up to four intervals of time—a period through which graphs of both types of equations line up closely.

All lines look straight if plotted on a log-scale and drawn with a thick enough marker.

[+] lanosbdld|3 years ago|reply
Compare 2^t, where t takes values from [1, 2, 3, 4], with t^2 over the same set of values. The results are closer than you might expect.
[+] josefresco|3 years ago|reply
Just finished reading Leonardo da Vinci by Walter Isaacson. Was a very good read, learned a lot about da Vinci that I was never taught or discovered on my own.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/34684622-leonardo-da-vin...

[+] actinium226|3 years ago|reply
^ I also just finished it. Really loved it. Really loved how Isaacson allowed himself to interject here and there with his own thoughts and his own appreciation of daVinci. I felt like it really highlighted some of the unique aspects of the man.

I also came to appreciate some of the artwork and now I can look at the Mona Lisa and have my own thoughts on the work.

[+] s1artibartfast|3 years ago|reply
I would think that individuals from antiquity would understand that an object rolling down hill picks up speed, or a rock dropped from higher hits harder.

The existence of acceleration aspect may not have been novel, but measuring the rate seems to be the novel part

[+] tbarbugli|3 years ago|reply
isn't indeed easier to measure a rolling object going down from a ramp? measuring water falling from a jar while moving the jar sounds very complicated.
[+] thefoolofdaath|3 years ago|reply
IMHO, this is less surprising discovery about him considering this probing is around 300 years ahead of his time, and Da Vinci already has proof for concepts 500 ahead of his time.
[+] dboreham|3 years ago|reply
Speaking of Leonardo: I noticed that the Mona Lisa has a new much better (more transparent) protection glass, at least new since I last visited a few years ago. It makes it imho more worthwhile to go see it. Also pro tip, go in February -- there's only a moderate crowd, not a crazy dense throng as in the summer.
[+] actinium226|3 years ago|reply
Here's another pro-tip: there are other "copies" of the Mona Lisa which, IMHO, are more interesting to look at than the deeply varnished one on display at the Louvre. The Prado Mona Lisa is one I particularly like.
[+] paxys|3 years ago|reply
Mathematicians and physicists in several parts of the world – including Europe – had a pretty solid scientific understanding of gravity and acceleration well before the 1500s, so I'm not sure why this is so notable.
[+] orwin|3 years ago|reply
Da Vinci's work on water's management and hydrolics ultimately pushed us through the technological wall the Romans hit, that lead toward waterworks and the first industrial revolution.
[+] p1mrx|3 years ago|reply
Would it be correct to say that you feel gravity/weight because the ground is accelerating upwards in your local reference frame, and your body's inertia resists that acceleration?
[+] samstave|3 years ago|reply
So... this is a really interesting comment to me.

Years ago when I was really into [various philosophies] and [secret society]...

They stated that gravity actually pushes up but it is mass and movement that counteract gravity's push

it was the vibrations of cymatics and sound that could counter-act mass on gravity and take advantage of gravity pushing up... and this is how the ancients knew to move/manipulate matter in space...

This is what Tesla alludes to through 3/6/9 vibrations, and how Ed Skalnanin built the coral castle.

Its all about changing harmonious vibrations, and both Skalnanin and the Egyptions had interesting vibratory circular tools which are missing parts, but basincally from spinning them they could manipulate the vibratory frequency of matter such that their mass didnt effect gravity and took advantage of gravity's push...

So the idea was to think of mass as the inverse of gravity when the frequencies are not sync'd..

I know it science-fiction, but its fun to think about.

I think the more interesting effect to look at is centrifugal forces. I think that everything spins because a constant turning (warping) of space-time (gravity pushing) 'UP' is how mass stays 'co-herent' 'co-hesion'

Think of superconductive levitation. Slow the spin of an object "in-motion" and it can levitate...

What if rather than through temperature control on manipulating the rotation of Atoms, you could use sound to levitate objects.. (seen the frog levitating in ultra-sound...

The conspiracy idea is that it is mapped out in certain stone carvings for the frequency.

Like the Rose church, which has Cymatic [atterns carved into its walls, which tell you the frequencies used...

Think of how certain alloys are made under magnetic fields, and ceramics. Imaging forging an alloy under both a magnetic field & a cymatic frequency.

I love this conspiracy theory as its a great foundation to science-fiction writing as well.

[+] hgsgm|3 years ago|reply
When you aren't moving you feel pressure due to you and the planet trying to free fall into each other to make a black hole, or at least pass each other in very close orbit, but being blocked by the repulsion of your electrons vs your shoes'/floor's/ground's.

When you are falling, you are feeling the air that is hitting you because it is not falling, causing the electron effect above, and your guts feel weird because your brain is noticing that nothing is pushing on them anymore.

[+] electroagenda|3 years ago|reply
Domingo de Soto (1494-1560) also indicated that gravity produced accelerarion way earlier than Galileo Galilei.
[+] pbj1968|3 years ago|reply
This Leonardo is really going places.
[+] rerdavies|3 years ago|reply
One of the things that irritates me a little about Da Vinci is he gets disproportionate credit for inventing things that don't actually work. The list of things he invented that he actually got to work is vanishingly small.

Even when claims are made that he is "prescient", there has never been, nor will there ever be a functional "helicopter" that looks like Da Vinci's helicopter.

[+] quectophoton|3 years ago|reply
I have deep respect for these geniuses of the past.

Imagine what they could have achieved if they have had access to modern tools, even "just" something like a graphing calculator[1].

[1]: I like https://www.desmos.com/calculator

[+] olddustytrail|3 years ago|reply
Inevitable pedantry: his name is Leonardo, not "da Vinci".

"da" means "from", or in this sense "of". So just as you might say "Jesus of Nazareth" you say "Leonardo of Vinci".

You would never say something like "...and Of Nazareth said...", so likewise it's weird to say "da Vinci invented..."

[+] alecst|3 years ago|reply
I asked an Italian native speaker about this and she said she calls him “da Vinci.” She has a PhD in linguistics, and in general she’s pretty precise with her language. She doesn’t seem to see anything wrong with it. Just as a datapoint.
[+] dokem|3 years ago|reply
You’re wrong because everyone in the English speaking world refers to him as da Vinci which means da Vinci is the name that refers to the person Leonardo. That’s how names and language work. Now back to playing with my LEGOs.