Newton's cannonball thought experiment demonstrates that orbit is perpetual free-fall: when a projectile is fired fast enough, the curvature of its fall matches the curvature of Earth, causing it to continuously fall around the planet without ever hitting the ground; if launched even faster, it can escape Earth's gravity entirely.
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Explain the Universe #8: Newton's CannonballAdded:
Day eight of explaining the universe.
What if you fired a cannonball so fast that it never hit the ground?
That is the idea behind orbit.
This was one of Isaac Newton's most famous thought experiments.
At low speed, it falls nearby. Faster, it lands farther away. But keep increasing the speed and watch what changes.
The ground keeps curving away beneath it, so the cannonball is still falling, but it keeps missing Earth. It is not escaping gravity.
Gravity is what bends its path into an orbit. That is what an orbit really is, a continuous fall around a planet. And if you launch it even faster, it does not just orbit. It can escape entirely.
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