A new look at da Vinci's papers reveals his insightful attempts to probe the nature of gravity 500 years ago.
From: California Institute of Technology
February 13, 2023 -- Engineers
from Caltech have discovered that Leonardo da Vinci's understanding of gravity
-- though not wholly accurate -- was centuries ahead of his time.
In an article published
in the journal Leonardo, the researchers draw upon a fresh look at
one of da Vinci's notebooks to show that the famed polymath had devised
experiments to demonstrate that gravity is a form of acceleration -- and that
he further modeled the gravitational constant to around 97 percent accuracy.
Da Vinci, who lived
from 1452 to 1519, was well ahead of the curve in exploring these concepts. It
wasn't until 1604 that Galileo Galilei would theorize that the distance covered
by a falling object was proportional to the square of time elapsed and not
until the late 17th century that Sir Isaac Newton would expand on that to
develop a law of universal gravitation, describing how objects are attracted to
one another. Da Vinci's primary hurdle was being limited by the tools at his
disposal. For example, he lacked a means of precisely measuring time as objects
fell.
Da Vinci's experiments
were first spotted by Mory Gharib, the Hans W. Liepmann Professor of
Aeronautics and Medical Engineering, in the Codex Arundel, a collection of
papers written by da Vinci that cover science, art, and personal topics. In
early 2017, Gharib was exploring da Vinci's techniques of flow visualization to
discuss with students he was teaching in a graduate course when he noticed a
series of sketches showing triangles generated by sand-like particles pouring
out from a jar in the newly released Codex Arundel, which can be viewed online
courtesy of the British Library.
"What caught my
eye was when he wrote 'Equatione di Moti' on the hypotenuse of one of
his sketched triangles -- the one that was an isosceles right triangle,"
says Gharib, lead author of the Leonardo paper. "I became
interested to see what Leonardo meant by that phrase."
To analyze the notes,
Gharib worked with colleagues Chris Roh, at the time a postdoctoral researcher
at Caltech and now an assistant professor at Cornell University, as well as
Flavio Noca of the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland
in Geneva. Noca provided translations of da Vinci's Italian notes (written in
his famous left-handed mirror writing that reads from right to left) as the
trio pored over the manuscript's diagrams.
In the papers, da Vinci
describes an experiment in which a water pitcher would be moved along a
straight path parallel to the ground, dumping out either water or a granular
material (most likely sand) along the way. His notes make it clear that he was
aware that the water or sand would not fall at a constant velocity but rather
would accelerate -- also that the material stops accelerating horizontally, as
it is no longer influenced by the pitcher, and that its acceleration is purely
downward due to gravity.
If the pitcher moves at
a constant speed, the line created by falling material is vertical, so no
triangle forms. If the pitcher accelerates at a constant rate, the line created
by the collection of falling material makes a straight but slanted line, which
then forms a triangle. And, as da Vinci pointed out in a key diagram, if the
pitcher's motion is accelerated at the same rate that gravity accelerates the
falling material, it creates an equilateral triangle -- which is what Gharib
originally noticed that da Vinci had highlighted with the note "Equatione
di Moti," or "equalization (equivalence) of motions."
Da Vinci sought to
mathematically describe that acceleration. It is here, according to the study's
authors, that he didn't quite hit the mark. To explore da Vinci's process, the
team used computer modeling to run his water vase experiment. Doing so yielded
da Vinci's error.
"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.
"We don't know if
da Vinci did further experiments or probed this question more deeply,"
Gharib says. "But the fact that he was grappling with this problem in this
way -- in the early 1500s -- demonstrates just how far ahead his thinking
was."
The paper is titled
"Leonardo da Vinci's Visualization of Gravity as a Form of
Acceleration."
Leonardo
da Vinci's forgotten experiments explored gravity as a form of acceleration --
ScienceDaily
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