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- Essay Name : 694.txt
- Uploader :
- Email Address :
- Language : English
- Subject : Physics
- Title : Galileo Galilei
- Grade : 83%
- School System : Community College
- Country : U.S.A.
- Author Comments : just the facts
- Teacher Comments :
- Date : 10/25/96
- Site found at : Altavista
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- The Life and Achievements of Galileo Galilei
-
-
- The paper which I will be writing will discuss the life, discoveries, and the modern impact of the scientific accomplishments
- of Galileo Galilei. Born in Pisa, Italy in 1564, Galileo entered Pisa University as a medical student in 1581 and became a
- professor of mathematics at Padua. An astronomer and mathematician, Galileo was, unfortunately for himself, a man ahead
- of his time. Galileo discovered the law of uniformly accelerated motion towards the Earth, the parabolic path of projectiles,
- and the law that all bodies have weight. Among his other accomplishments was the improvement of the refracting telescope
- in 1610 and his advocacy of the Copernican theory which brought him into a conflict of ideas and truths between himself and
- the Inquisition. He was condemned by the church whose theories threatened everything that was taught by the priesthood
- as the holy truth and he was eventually broken by the Inquisition. Before being ultimately defeated by the church, however,
- Galileo made many contributions to the world of physics. His scientific discoveries and endeavors were only a portion of his
- contributions to the scientific community. Galileo's methods of testing and proving his theories were also of major importance
- since these painstaking and exact methodologies would lay the groundwork for future scientific discoveries. His brilliance
- brought about a new era in scientific advancement and his defeat at the hands of the church put a stop to the scientific
- revolution which he had started. In 1993 the Vatican formally recognized the validity of Galileo Galilei's scientific work.
-
- References Cited
- 1. GALILEO: PIONEER SCIENTIST - Stillman Drake 1990
- 2. GALILEO A LIFE - James Reston, Jr. 1941
- 3. COLLEGE MATHEMATICS JOURNAL - May 1994, Volume 25 Issue 3, p 193
-
- Galileo Galilei was a great scientist and pioneer in the fields of mechanics, astronomy, thermometry, and magnetism, although
- mechanics and astronomy were his main passions. He was arguably one of the brightest men who ever lived. Galileo
- discovered and enhanced many scientific discoveries of his time period and was highly regarded as a Mathematician and
- Natural Philosopher. Galileo was persecuted for his views on Earth's relationship with the rest of the heavens since he
- believed that the Earth revolved around the Sun and that the heavens were constantly changing and evolving. Since Galilei's
- vision of a metamorphosing universe came in direct conflict with the views of Aristotle, views held by and supported by the
- church, Galileo was eventually called before the Inquisition and forced to recant his views. Nonetheless, Galileo Galilei made
- significant contributions to the scientific community and he is remembered as a great scientist and innovator.
-
- Galileo Galilei was born in 1564 in Pisa, Italy (then a part of the Duchy of Tuscany), to Vincenzo Galilei, a musician, and
- Giulia Ammannati. Galileo studied medicine at the university of Pisa from 1581 to 1585, but his real interests were in
- mathematics and natural philosophy and Galileo left the university in 1585 without a degree. It was during this time frame
- that Galileo began to doubt conventional science, since much of what he was being taught at that time as scientific fact was
- conflicting with the evidence which he saw in his hands-on medicalobservations(Hitzeroth, Heerboth, The Importance of
- Galileo, pp 14-15). Following his period as a student, Galileo tried his hand at teaching.
-
- Galileo began privately teaching in Florence and he returned to the university of Pisa to teach mathematics in 1589. Galileo
- taught at the university of Pisa until 1592 when he was appointed professor of mathematics at Padua (the university of the
- Republic of Venice.) Galileo's duties as a professor of mathematics at Padua were to teach Euclidean geometry and standard
- (geocentric) astronomy to medical students. The medical students at that time were expected to know some astronomy in
- order to make use of astrology in their medical practices. In Padua, he continued his physics research in the area of mechanics
- and astronomy.
-
- In the area of mechanics is where Galileo's most famous observations were exhibited. The traditional theory accepted by
- nearly everyone at that time was Aristotle's theory that heavier objects, when dropped from the same height as lighter ones,
- will fall at a faster rate. In opposition to this notion, Galileo stated that with the removal of outside influences such as wind
- resistance, both objects will fall simultaneously at virtually the same speed. Although a very popular story of Galileo states
- that he attempted to prove this theory by dropping different weights from the campanile (leaning tower) of the Duomo in Pisa,
- this particular experiment was never actually proven to have occurred. However, a similar experiment had already been made
- by the Flemish engineer Simon Stevin in 1586. Galileo has said that his interest in Aristotle's Theory about falling objects
- was aroused when, during a hailstorm, he noticed that both large and small hailstones hit the ground at the same time. This
- observation caused Galileo to seriously doubt Aristotle's Theory since according to Aristotle, the larger-sized hailstones would
- have had to have fallen from a much greater height and at virtually the same time as the lighter hailstones in order for them
- to reach the ground at the same time (which Galileo found very improbable.)
-
- Galileo was also very much interested in astronomy. Tycho Brahe, a Danish astronomer, found a supernova in the
- constellation Cassiopeia in 1572 which promptly disappeared two years later. This discovery challenged Aristotle's theory
- of the heavens as perfect, unchanging, and immutable. This discovery, along with another nova appearance in 1604, also
- persuaded Galileo to give three public lectures in Padua in his capacity as a professor of mathematics. Galileo used the nova
- as an excuse to challenge Aristotle's views of heavens which were unchanging.
-
- In 1609, Galileo learned of a spyglass that a Dutchman had shown in Venice. Using his own technical skills as a
- mathematician and a workman, along with reports of the construction of the device, Galileo made a series of telescopes whose
- optical performance was much better than that of the Dutch instrument. The first telescope he constructed had a threefold
- magnification, which he quickly improved to 32 times magnification. It was this instrument which Galileo used to develop
- his astronomical discoveries.
-
- The numerous astronomical discoveries made by Galileo with the aid of his telescopes were described in a short book called
- Message from the stars or Starry Messenger (Sidereus Nuncius) published in Venice in May 1610. In this book, Galileo
- claimed to have seen mountains on the Moon, to have proved that the Milky Way was made up of a myriad of tiny stars, and
- to have seen four small bodies (moons) orbiting the planet Jupiter. Galileo named the moons of Jupiter the "Medicean stars".
- It was after this discovery of the moons of Jupiter that Galileo became the official mathematician and natural philosopher to
- the Grand Duke of Tuscany. It was also during this time frame that Galileo made many mathematical observations of physical
- properties.
-
- Among these observations was the discovery that projectiles follow parabolic paths. This discovery allowed arcs of physical
- objects to be calculated. Another achievement of Galileo in this time period was the naming of the cycloid curve in 1599.
- In 1639, Galileo wrote to Toricelli about the cycloid, saying that he had been studying it's properties for forty years. Galileo
- tried and failed to find the area of a cycloid by comparing it's area to that of the generating circle. After his failure at trying
- to find a mathematical method of finding the area of a cycloid, he tried weighing pieces of metal cut into the shape of the
- cycloid. He found that the ratio of the weights was approximately three to one but decided that it was not exactly three.
-
- It was in his employ with the Grand Duke of Tuscany in Florence that Galileo first became involved in disputes about
- Copernicanism. Copernicanism was a theory that was posed by Nicolaus Copernicus on the position of the earth in relation
- to the heavens. Copernicus had stated in the book On the revolutions of the heavenly spheres (De revolutionibus orbium
- coelestium, Nuremberg, 1543), that the Sun (not the Earth) is at rest in the center of the universe and that the earth revolves
- around the sun. This theory , also known as the heliocentric theory, was lent credence in Galileo's eyes when, in 1613, he
- discovered that, when seen through the telescope, the planet Venus showed phases resembling those of the Moon, and
- therefore Venus must orbit the Sun and not the Earth(Drake, Galileo: Pioneer Scientist, pp. 136 - 137). Galileo went to great
- lengths to support Copernicanism in the use of his discoveries and observations, he also used his great mathematical skills to
- aid in proving Copernican theories.
-
- Between 1619 and 1624 Galileo adapted a telescope for the viewing of extremely small objects. This microscope, which he
- called "occhialini" was composed of the tube of a telescope, of reduced size, furnished with two lenses. Galileo gave his
- microscopes to various people, including Federigo Cesi.
-
- It was the support of the Copernican theories which brought Galileo into direct conflict with the Inquisition and the Roman
- Catholic Church. Since Copernicanism was in contradiction with Scripture, Galileo was treading on thin ice with the
- Inquisition. A young Dominican, Tommaso Caccini, denounced Galileo, his theories, and the Copernican theories officially
- from the pulpit during a sermon in the Santa Maria Novella in 1614 (de Santillana, The Crime of Galileo, p. 42). In 1616,
- Galileo was officially advised by Cardinal Bellarmino on the behalf of the Pope to proceed with caution and to speak only
- hypothetically about the Copernican theory and not as if the theory were reality. Following this confrontation with the
- church, Galileo returned to Florence and continued work on his book (Dialogue Concerning theTwo Chief World Systems),
- as the Pope wished, Galileo gave more emphasis to mathematical arguments rather than to experimental or physical
- arguments.
-
- Although Galileo tried to obey the Pope's wishes in his wording of the Dialogue, when the book finally appeared in 1632, it
- raised an immediate storm of protest leading immediately to the arrest of Galileo and a trial by the Inquisition. The inquisition
- found Galileo guilty of publishing a heretical book and insisted that he denounce his theories and confess his "crimes" before
- the church. Although he was lead to believe that this act would cause the Inquisition to be lenient (and would keep them from
- torturing him to death), Galileo was still sentenced to life imprisonment at his villa in Arcetri near Florence (Reston, Galileo
- A Life, pp. 253 - 254.)
-
- It was during this house arrest that Galileo produced perhaps his greatest work, his Discourses on the Two New Sciences ,
- which has been hailed as possibly the cornerstone of modern physics. This book was smuggled out of Italy to France and was
- published in Leyden in 1638. In this book, Galileo presented the true laws of accelerated motion and falling bodies, as well
- as the fundamental theory of projectile motion and important applications of mathematics to a multitude of physical problems.
-
- Galileo died totally blind at 77 years old in 1642. Galileo believed that experimentations and observations of these
- experiments was crucial to the scientific process. (Shapere, Galileo A Philisophical Study, p. 126) Although Galileo was a
- great scientist, Pope Urban VIII refused to permit Galileo's burial with a monument, instead, Galileo was buried
- unceremoniously in the Church of Santo Croce, in Florence. His remains have since been moved to their present location
- in a magnificent tomb opposite that of Michelangelo near the entrance to the church. It was only as recently as 1993 that the
- church has admitted that they were wrong and that Galileo's theories were correct.
- Galileo's extraordinary accomplishments in the fields of mathematics and astronomy upheld and proved the theories of
- Copernicus whose theories may have been scoffed at as fantasy. He began the scientific revolution of his time period and
- his persecution by the church, unfortunately, put an end to the revolution. He was truly a pioneer. Were it not for Galileo's
- courage of his convictions, many scientific discoveries, including those of other scientists of his era, may never have occurred
- or may have been delayed considerably. Without the theories, discoveries, and experiments of Galileo Galilei, we may never
- have made it to the moon, been able to examine viruses or germs under a microscope to be able to defeat them, or been able
- to write a physical science term paper (on Galileo of course.) If for no other reason than his invention of the microscope,
- Galileo deserves to be known as one of the greatest scientists the world has ever known.
-
- References Cited
-
- 1. Drake, Stillman - 1990, GALILEO: PIONEER SCIENTIST, The University of Chicago Press, pp. 261
- 2. Reston, James Jr. - 1941, GALILEO A LIFE, Harper Collins Publishers, pp. 319
- 3. De Santillana, Giorgio - 1955, THE CRIME OF GALILEO, The University of Chicago Press, pp. 339
- 4. Hitzeroth, Deborah, Sharon Heerboth - 1961, THE IMPORTANCE OF GALILEO GALILEI, Lucent Books, pp. 95
- 5. Shapere, Dudley - 1974, GALILEO A PHILOSOPHICAL STUDY, The University of Chicago Press, pp. 161
- 6 COLLEGE MATHEMATICS JOURNAL - May 1994, Volume 25 Issue 3, p 193
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-