Galileo Galilei, who passed
away on 8 January 1642, was an
Italian philosopher, astronomer, and mathematician who made essential
contributions to the sciences of astronomy, motion and strength of the material
and several developments of scientific methods.
If we talk about his discoveries, Galileo was the first person
to report telescopic observations of the mountains on the moon, the rings of
Saturn, the moons of Jupiter and the phases of Venus. He calculated the law of
free fall, conceived by the principle of inertia; he also determined the
parabolic trajectory of projectiles and promoted the relativity of motion.
Galileo’s significant contributions were observational data,
which he obtained with a telescope he made himself. He was the first
astrophysicist to scan the spaces with a light-magnifying instrument; he is
also referred to as the father of observational astronomy.
Telescopic
Discoveries of Galileo
Galileo was not only the first inventor of the reflecting
telescope, but he also significantly enhanced its power. What
set Galileo apart was that he quickly figured out how to improve the
instrument.
Galileo was the first to observe the rough, cratered surface of
the moon; Jupiter’s four largest satellites named the Galilean moons; dark
spots on the sun’s surface, known as sunspots; and the phases of the phases of
Venus with his unprecedentedly powerful telescopes.
Earth’s
Orbit
Soon after the invention of the telescope in the Netherlands, Galileo
created his own from improvised spectacle lenses. He learned how to make unprecedentedly
powerful telescopes, which he used to study the solar phases of the planet
Venus. He also concluded that the sun is the central point of the solar system,
not the Earth, as was formerly assumed, after noticing and studying the similar
phases of Venus and the moon. Such discoveries of Galileo took the world of
inventions to another level.
The
Law of Falling Bodies
The Ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle taught that heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones, but Galileo wasn’t convinced. By climbing to the top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa, Galileo demonstrated this theory by dropping items of various weights off the side, which states that every object will fall at an equal rate. All items hit the ground simultaneously. This law of falling bodies was his crucial contribution in the field of motion.
The
Principle of Pendulum
The law of the pendulum was discovered by Galileo Galilei, which made
the young scientist famous. Galileo observed that no matter how big the swings
are, the time it will take for each swing to complete will be the same because
the kinetic energy left in the pendulum will always be the same; it is just
shifted from one direction to the other. This law is eventually used to
regulate clocks.
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