inertiali
Inertiali, in physics and classical mechanics, refers to inertial frames of reference and related concepts. An inertial frame is a frame of reference in which Newton's laws hold: a body not subjected to external forces moves at constant velocity, and a body at rest remains at rest. Non-inertial frames are accelerating, where fictitious or pseudo-forces appear to account for observed accelerations. Examples include a freely moving train on a straight track (approximately inertial) versus a rotating merry-go-round (non-inertial).
Inertial forces such as Coriolis and centrifugal forces arise when analyzing motion from non-inertial frames; they
Inertial mass quantifies an object's resistance to acceleration, and experiments show its equality to gravitational mass,
Applications include inertial navigation systems (INS) that use accelerometers and gyroscopes to track velocity and position
History: The principle of inertia traces to Galileo and Newton; the modern understanding of inertial frames
Notes: The term inertiali is primarily used in Italian-language contexts; in English, the corresponding term is