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Newton's Laws of Motion
Three rules explain how everything moves — even a little pink axolotl floating through deep space. Read a bit, then play with the experiments to watch each law happen with your very own space axolotl.
Before we start
Who was Isaac Newton?
Over 300 years ago, a scientist named Isaac Newton figured out three simple rules that describe how objects move and how forces push and pull on them. We still use them today to build cars, bridges, roller coasters, and the rockets that carry brave axolotls to the Moon.
A force is just a push or a pull. Kicking a ball, gravity pulling you down, a magnet tugging on metal — those are all forces. Newton's laws tell us what forces do to the stuff they act on.
Newton's First Law
The Law of Inertia
"An object stays still, or keeps moving in a straight line at the same speed, unless a force acts on it."
Everything is a little bit lazy — it wants to keep doing whatever it's already doing. This "laziness" is called inertia. A resting axolotl won't suddenly zoom off on her own, and a moving one won't speed up, slow down, or turn unless something pushes her.
In her lagoon a swimming axolotl slows and stops — but only because the water is secretly pushing back on her. Remove that, like in space, and she would glide forever.
Experiment: Push an axolotl through space
Newton's Second Law
Force, Mass & Acceleration
"The bigger the force, the faster something speeds up — but the heavier it is, the harder it is to move."
This law is famous as an equation:
That means Force = mass × acceleration. Flip it around and you get a = F ÷ m: acceleration is how fast the speed changes. Push the same space-sled harder and it accelerates more. Pile on more axolotls (more mass) and the same push barely moves it.
Experiment: Launch an axolotl space-sled
Newton's Third Law
Action & Reaction
"For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction."
Forces always come in pairs. When you push on something, it pushes back on you just as hard, in the opposite direction. Jump off a skateboard and it rolls backward. This is exactly how a rocket flies: it throws hot gas downward, and the gas pushes the rocket — and the axolotl inside — upward.
Experiment: Fly the axolotl rocket into orbit
Check yourself
Quick Quiz
Tap the answer you think is right. You'll find out right away!
1. An axolotl is gliding through space with nothing touching her. What happens?
2. You push two space-sleds with the same force. One is heavy, one is light. Which speeds up faster?
3. The axolotl's rocket pushes hot gas downward. Why does it go up?
4. The "laziness" that makes objects resist changing their motion is called…
Score: 0 / 4
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