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Galileo
(redirected from Galilei)

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Galileo (1564–1642)

Enlarge picture
A fresco dating from 1841 in the Observatory Academy, Florence, Italy, which shows the 17-year-old Italian mathematician and astronomer Galileo contemplating a swinging lamp in Pisa Cathedral, and coming to the realization that each swing, long or short, takes the same time. It was only at the end of his life, nearly blind, that Galileo returned to the notion of a pendulum's regularity, and considered its application to clocks.

Italian mathematician, astronomer, and physicist. He developed the astronomical telescope and was the first to see sunspots, the four main satellites of Jupiter, and the appearance of Venus going through phases, thus proving it was orbiting the Sun. Galileo discovered that freely falling bodies, heavy or light, have the same, constant acceleration and that this acceleration is due to gravity. He also determined that a body moving on a perfectly smooth horizontal surface would neither speed up nor slow down. He invented a thermometer, a hydrostatic balance, and a compass, and discovered that the path of a projectile is a parabola.

Galileo's work founded the modern scientific method of deducing laws to explain the results of observation and experiment, although the story of his dropping cannonballs from the Leaning Tower of Pisa is questionable. His observations were an unwelcome refutation of the Aristotelian ideas taught at universities, largely because they made plausible for the first time the Sun-centred theory of Polish astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus. Galileo's persuasive Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo/Dialogues on the Two Chief Systems of the World (1632) was banned by the church authorities in Rome and he was made to recant by the Inquisition.

Astronomy and the invention of the telescope

In July 1609, hearing that a Dutch scientist had made a telescope, Galileo worked out the principles involved and made a number of telescopes. He compiled fairly accurate tables of the orbits of four of Jupiter's satellites and proposed that their frequent eclipses could serve as a means of determining longitude on land and at sea. His observations on sunspots and Venus going through phases supported Copernicus's theory that the Earth rotated and orbited the Sun. Galileo's results published in Sidereus Nuncius/The Starry Messenger (1610) were revolutionary.

He believed, however – following both Greek and medieval tradition – that orbits must be circular, not elliptical, in order to maintain the fabric of the cosmos in a state of perfection. This preconception prevented him from deriving a full formulation of the law of inertia, which was later to be attributed to the contemporary French mathematician René Descartes.

The pendulum

Galileo made several fundamental contributions to mechanics. He rejected the impetus theory that a force or push is required to sustain motion. While watching swinging lamps in Pisa Cathedral, Galileo determined that each oscillation of a pendulum takes the same amount of time despite the difference in amplitude, and recognized the potential importance of this observation to timekeeping. In a later publication, he presented his derivation that the square of the period of a pendulum varies with its length (and is independent of the mass of the pendulum bob).

Mechanics and the law of falling bodies

Galileo discovered before Newton that two objects of different weights – an apple and a melon, for instance – falling from the same height would hit the ground at the same time. He realized that gravity not only causes a body to fall, but also determines the motion of rising bodies and, furthermore, that gravity extends to the centre of the Earth. Galileo then showed that the motion of a projectile is made up of two components: one component consists of uniform motion in a horizontal direction, and the other component is vertical motion under acceleration or deceleration due to gravity.

Galileo used this explanation to refute objections to Copernicus. It had been argued, against Copernicus, that a turning Earth would not carry along birds and clouds. Galileo explained that the motion of a bird, like a projectile, has a horizontal component that is provided by the motion of the Earth and that this horizontal component of motion always exists to keep such objects in position even though they are not attached to the ground.

Galileo came to an understanding of uniform velocity and uniform acceleration by measuring the time it takes for bodies to move various distances. He had the brilliant idea of slowing vertical motion by measuring the movement of balls rolling down inclined planes, realizing that the vertical component of this motion is a uniform acceleration due to gravity. It took Galileo many years to arrive at the correct expression of the law of falling bodies, which he presented in Discorsi e dimostrazioni matematiche intorno a due nove scienze/Discourses and Mathematical Discoveries Concerning Two New Sciences (1638) as:

s=1/2at2

where s is speed, a is the acceleration due to gravity, and t is time. He found that the distance travelled by a falling body is proportional to the square of the time of descent.

A summation of his life's work, Discourses also included the facts that the trajectory of a projectile is a parabola, and that the law of falling bodies is perfectly obeyed only in a vacuum, and that air resistance always causes a uniform terminal velocity to be reached.

Engineering

The other new science of Galileo's masterwork was engineering, particularly the science of structures. His main contribution was to point out that the dimensions of a structure are important to its stability: a small structure will stand whereas a larger structure of the same relative dimensions may collapse. Using the laws of levers, Galileo went on to examine the strengths of the materials necessary to support structures.

Thermometer

Galileo's other achievements include the invention of the thermometer in 1593. This device consisted of a bulb of air that expanded or contracted as the temperature changed, causing the level of a column of water to rise or fall. Galileo's thermometer was very inaccurate because it neglected the effect of atmospheric pressure, but it is historically important as one of the first measuring instruments in science.

Life

Galileo was born and educated in Pisa, and in 1589 became professor of mathematics at the university there. In 1592 he accepted a position as professor at Padua, as his revolutionary discoveries had made him many enemies at Pisa. At Padua he wrote a treatise on the specific gravities of solid bodies, and experimented with falling bodies to determine the laws governing their motions. He worked at Padua until 1610, when he was appointed chief mathematician to the grand duke of Tuscany, Ferdinand II, to whom he dedicated his Dialogo.

Galileo's attempts to explain biblical texts in the light of his theory were against the accepted opinion, and he was compelled by the Roman Inquisition not to assert ‘what seemed to contradict Scripture’ in 1616. He was tried for heresy in 1633, and, forced to abjure his belief that the Earth moves around the Sun, Galileo is reputed to have muttered: ‘Eppur si muove’ (‘Yet it does move’). He was to recite the seven Penitential Psalms once a week for three years, and was put under house arrest for his last years.

Galileo

Enlarge picture
The Galileo spacecraft about to be detached from the Earth-orbiting space shuttle Atlantis at the beginning of its six-year journey to Jupiter.

Spacecraft launched from the space shuttle Atlantis on 18 October 1989 to explore the planet Jupiter. Galileo's probe entered the atmosphere of Jupiter in December 1995. It radioed information back to the orbiter for 57 minutes before the craft was destroyed by atmospheric pressure. The first pictures of Jupiter were transmitted in 1996. In 1997 Galileo completed two fly-bys of Jupiter's fourth-largest and icy moon Europa, and in February 2000 it passed within 200 km/125 mi of Jupiter's third-largest moon Io. In September 2003, with its mission completed, the orbiter was deliberately plunged into Jupiter's atmosphere to avoid any chance that it would crash onto a satellite and contaminate it.

The spacecraft flew past the planet Venus in February 1990 and passed within 970 km/600 mi of Earth in December 1990 and December 1992, using the gravitational fields of these two planets to increase its velocity. It flew past the asteroids Gaspra in 1991 and Ida in 1993, taking close-up photographs.

At the end of July 1995, and 55 million km/34 million mi from Jupiter, Galileo entered a dust storm and began detecting up to 20,000 particles a day (previously the maximum detected was 200). The dust is associated with Jupiter, and may come from the planet itself, its rings, or its satellites.

galileo

Unit of acceleration, used in geological surveying. One galileo is 10−2 metres per second per second. The Earth's gravitational field often differs by several milligals (thousandths of galileos) in different places, because of the varying densities of the rocks beneath the surface.



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Special attention has been paid to several individuals including Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei, the Renaissance astrologer Girolarno Cardano, the Rosicrucians, John Dee, and the medical alchemist Simon Forman by devoting chapters to specific aspects of their work.
Later that spring I went to the theatre with his wife and some of his fellow activists to see Brecht's Galileo Galilei.
Galileo Galilei said, "I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use.
 
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