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Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)

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Overview and BeginningsGalileo Galilei

Galileo Galilei was an Italian mathematician and philosopher. He is probably the most famous of all Renaissance scientists, and he is often considered the founder of modern astronomy. The reason for this was his perfection of the refracting telescope, which was invented in Holland in the very early 1600s. Galileo heard of it, and built a home-made model in 1609.

With it, Galileo was able to see the four major moons of Jupiter (now called the Galilean Satellites in his honor)*. Besides these, which rank among the most important of his observations, Galileo drew detailed diagrams of Earth's moon, observing valleys and mountains and craters. He also looked at the sun and observed dark blemishes on its surface, which are now called sunspots. From the movement of these, he was able to determine that the sun has a rotation period of about one month.

These observations of celestial bodies, published in a book called Sidereus Nuncius (The Starry Messenger) in 1610, were the foundations of his troubles with the Catholic Church.

*Galileo originally named the four moons of Jupiter the "Medician Stars, " in honor the ruling family of his province in Italy at the time. After all, it's not a bad idea to name a celestial object after your major funding source.

Resistance Is Futile

Besides the geocentric model of the universe, the Church held that celestial bodies, such as the sun and moon, were prefect - this is a view that probably has its foundation in the classical texts of the ancient Greeks. Galileo's observations of spots on the sun and varied terrain on the moon were in direct opposition to this doctrine.

Besides these imperfections that he noted in the celestial globes, Galileo viewed the Jupiter system with its moons as a small model of our solar system, and he became convinced of the Copernican heliocentric model. Making his argument public, Galileo was ordered by the Church in 1616 to retract his claims that the Earth rotated around the sun.

However, Galileo did not, and in 1632 published the book Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. In it, he presented two characters, one that argued for the Copernican model and the other who was a proponent of geocentricity. Time and again in the book, the Copernican believer is shown to be well-founded in logic and observation. Not only did the book present again this forbidden view, but it was also published in Italian which made it widely available to the general public.

Galileo was again brought before the Church, and he was ordered to retract his claims upon threat of torture. He was then placed under house arrest in 1633 through the end of his life, nine years later on January 8, 1642. His book, however, was brought to a press in Holland where it was published and referred to as Two New Sciences. In 1992, the Catholic Church reconsidered the Inquisition's findings, and removed Galileo from any wrongdoings.

In honor of Galileo, the Galileo spacecraft was launched in 1989 by NASA. The craft's mission was to explore Jupiter and its moons, just as its namesake had over 300 years earlier.


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