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GalileoGalileo, oil on canvas by Justus Sustermans, c. 1637; in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence.
SCALA/Art Resource, New YorkGalileo Galilei is born in Pisa, Italy. He is the oldest son of Vincenzo Galilei, a musician who made important contributions to the theory and practice of music. In the early 1570s the family moves to Florence where Galileo attends the monastery school in Vallombrosa.
1581
Galileo enters the University of Pisa to study medicine but eventually decides to make mathematics and natural philosophy his profession. He later writes a short treatise on weighing small quantities and begins his study of motion.
1589–92
GalileoGalileo observes a swaying chandelier in the Pisa cathedral.
Galileo teaches at the University of Padua and continues his studies of motion. His experiments result in the law of falling bodies and the discovery that the flight of a projectile, such as a cannonball, is curved. Both ideas contradict Aristotelian physics.
1609–10
Galileo's telescopesTwo of Galileo's first telescopes; in the Museo Galileo, Florence.
Scala/Art Resource, New York
GalileoA 19th-century illustration depicts Galileo demonstrating his telescope for the senators of Venice.
Roman Catholic Church officials grow increasingly alarmed over Galileo’s support for Copernican ideas. In his Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina, Galileo discusses the problem of interpreting biblical passages in light of Copernican theory. The church warns him not to “hold, teach, or defend” this theory “either orally or in writing.”
1623
Galileo publishes The Assayer, a discussion of physical reality—the “book of the universe”—and the scientific method of exploring it. He argues that the universe is written in the language of mathematics and geometry and that without learning this language, the true nature of the universe cannot be understood.
1624
Pope Urban VIII gives Galileo permission to write about his theories of the universe but warns him to give Copernicus only slight treatment.
Courtesy of the Joseph Regenstein Library, The University of ChicagoGalileo publishes Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, Ptolemaic & Copernican (1632). The work is a debate among three characters, but the conclusions clearly favor Copernicus. The following year Galileo is summoned to Rome to stand trial for heresy. He is convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. Instead of going to prison he is placed under house arrest in a villa near Florence for the remainder of his life.
1633–38
Galileo continues his work, writing a new book, Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences. It discusses his previous studies regarding the strength of materials and summarizes his mathematical and experimental investigations of motion. In 1638 the work is smuggled out of Italy and published in the Netherlands.
January 8, 1642
Galileo dies in his villa, at the age of 77. More than 350 years later the church acknowledges that Galileo had been right about the Copernican theory.
Planet, (from Greek planētes, “wanderers”), broadly, any relatively large natural body that revolves in an orbit around the Sun or around some other star and that is not radiating energy from internal nuclear fusion reactions. In addition to the above description, some scientists impose additional
Solar system, assemblage consisting of the Sun—an average star in the Milky Way Galaxy—and those bodies orbiting around it: 8 (formerly 9) planets with more than 210 known planetary satellites (moons); many asteroids, some with their own satellites; comets and other icy bodies; and vast reaches of