Newton's tree to experience zero gravity, in space

Astronaut to take piece of tree that aided scientist's discovery of gravity to international space station.

May 09, 2010 11:53 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 08:54 pm IST

This undated photo released by the Royal Society via PA shows Sir Isaac Newton. An 18th-century account of how a falling piece of fruit helped  Newton develop the theory of gravity is being posted to the Web, making scans of the fragile paper manuscript widely available to the public for the first time. Newton's encounter with an apple ranks among science's most celebrated anecdotes, and Britain's Royal Society said it was making the documents available online Monday, Jan. 18, 2010. (AP Photo/Royal Society/PA) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE **

This undated photo released by the Royal Society via PA shows Sir Isaac Newton. An 18th-century account of how a falling piece of fruit helped Newton develop the theory of gravity is being posted to the Web, making scans of the fragile paper manuscript widely available to the public for the first time. Newton's encounter with an apple ranks among science's most celebrated anecdotes, and Britain's Royal Society said it was making the documents available online Monday, Jan. 18, 2010. (AP Photo/Royal Society/PA) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE **

An astronaut is planning a unique test of Sir Isaac Newton's theory of gravity — by taking an original piece of the scientist's famous apple tree on a five-mile journey into space.

British-born Piers Sellers plans to release the 10-cm fragment in zero gravity during his 12-day mission to the International Space Station, as a tribute to Newton's discovery of gravity in 1666, when he watched an apple fall to the ground in his garden.

“I'll take it up and let it float around for a bit, which will confuse Isaac,” said the 55-year-old NASA spaceman, a veteran of two previous shuttle missions and a graduate of the University of Edinburgh.

“While it's up there, it will be experiencing no gravity, so if it had an apple on it, the apple wouldn't fall.

“I'm pretty sure that Sir Isaac would have loved to see this, assuming he wasn't spacesick, as it would have proved his first law of motion to be correct.”

The tree fragment, engraved with the scientist's name, is stowed aboard the shuttle Atlantis at Cape Canaveral, Florida, awaiting Friday's blast-off.

The stunt is part of the 350th anniversary celebrations of the Royal Society, of which Newton, who died in 1727, was a president.

The society hopes to display the fragment at its 10-day festival of science and arts at London's Southbank Centre next month, and later at its HQ in Carlton House Terrace, London, where it will join exhibits including Newton's first telescope and his death mask.

Several sections stripped from the tree, which still stands at Woolsthorpe Manor, the physicist's former home in Lincolnshire, are stored in the society's vaults as part of a huge collection of Newton memorabilia donated by the antiquarian Sir Charles Turner in the 1700s.

Mr. Sellers, who was born in Crowborough, Sussex, but assumed dual U.K.-U.S. nationality in 1991 to join NASA, invited the society to send an item to go into space. On a previous spaceflight, he took a commemorative medallion that the group presented to the physicist Stephen Hawking. — © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2010

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