Pretty much everything can be applied to calculus, and calculus to everything. If you have ever read the novel "Halo" you can see (in the first book) that Master Chief, had forgotten how much gravity was on the space-craft, and used calculus to determine the acceleration of gravity by timing the drop of a bolt and figuring out everything else. Calculus is especially important for any kind of profession that involves projectiles.
Isaac Newton. He invented Differential Calculus before the age of 26, and some say he continued to discover and explore it at the same rate that we learn about it today.
Well i guess you mean Isaac newton. He did alot of work into various branches of maths, and his notation for algebra and calculus is still widely used today.
it's trickyWell, that question is far too difficult to answer; you should take some Calc courses.Calculus is the study of the rate at which something changes, in relation to something else... Think slope... except it gets complicated.
The great English scientist Sir Isaac Newton!
Izac Newton
Calculus.
Sir Isaac Newton. He and Leibniz both invented the calculus independently.
the gravity on venus is about 90.4% of earths
Newton Invented it for his theory of gravity.
If you mean Sir Issac Newton, calculus and gravity.
The Sun's gravity, at its surface, is about 28 times Earth's surface gravity.
"Relative gravity" is used more or less as a synonym for density; it bears no direct relation with "gravity" as such. So, you would have to specify, "specific gravity [or density] of what substance"."Relative gravity" is used more or less as a synonym for density; it bears no direct relation with "gravity" as such. So, you would have to specify, "specific gravity [or density] of what substance"."Relative gravity" is used more or less as a synonym for density; it bears no direct relation with "gravity" as such. So, you would have to specify, "specific gravity [or density] of what substance"."Relative gravity" is used more or less as a synonym for density; it bears no direct relation with "gravity" as such. So, you would have to specify, "specific gravity [or density] of what substance".
The way in which a body moves when under the influence of gravity, and possibly other forces, requires the study if vector calculus. The net forces cause acceleration in the motion. The velocity of the body is the integral of the acceleration and displacement is the integral of velocity.
Newton developed his Law of Gravity and calculus when he was away from the university.
Gottfried Liebniz and Isaac Newton are credited with co-developing the Calculus, based on work from Archimedes, Cavalieri, and others. But only Newton also studied gravity, and attempted to come up with a theory about how and why it worked.
Pretty much everything can be applied to calculus, and calculus to everything. If you have ever read the novel "Halo" you can see (in the first book) that Master Chief, had forgotten how much gravity was on the space-craft, and used calculus to determine the acceleration of gravity by timing the drop of a bolt and figuring out everything else. Calculus is especially important for any kind of profession that involves projectiles.