All About Space

SECRET LIVES OF SPACE'S GREATEST HEROES

Galileo Galilei

The great Italian astronomer and physicist Galileo inherited his interest in science from his musical father. Vincenzo Galilei specialised in the lute, a distant relative of modern guitars, and was also a musical theorist who used experimentation and mathematics to identify a new law that correctly described the relationship between the tension on a string and its musical pitch. Vincenzo’s discoveries helped to inspire his son’s mathematical approach to problems of ‘natural philosophy’ and foreshadowed Galileo’s own struggles to overturn outdated views of the world.

At age 17, Galileo became a student in the University at Pisa, training in medicine at his father’s suggestion. He made his first great discovery – that a pendulum has a regular period regardless of the width of its oscillations – while watching a swinging lamp in Pisa Cathedral, and had soon turned it into a practical device for measuring a patient’s pulse. After persuading his father to let him pursue his interest in mathematics, he became a professor by the age of 25.

Throughout his life, Galileo was perpetually short of cash. His father’s death left him responsible for his mother and three younger siblings – and later his own partner and three children. He boosted his income by taking in private students and selling his inventions, and later took a better paid job at Padua in the Republic of Venice. It was here in 1609 that he got word of an amazing new invention from the Netherlands – the telescope.

Galileo immediately set out to make a telescope of his own, using lenses mounted at either end of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from All About Space

All About Space2 min read
Stunning Images From The Very Large Telescope Capture Unique Views Of Planet Formation
New images captured by the Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile reveal unique insights into planet formation around young stars. In these portraits, emerging planetary systems look more like miniature galaxies rather than discs of debris. The figures
All About Space2 min read
Cassiopeia’s Dark-sky Royalty
Many amateur astronomers think that Cassiopeia is a rather barren constellation, and perhaps compared to its more glitzy neighbours it is. For example, nearby Perseus has the stunning and famous ‘Double Cluster’ of NGC 869 and NGC 884, Taurus has it
All About Space3 min read
This Month’s Planets
Uranus is a truly fascinating world – a slow-moving, faraway ‘ice giant’ planet much larger and colder than our own lush, green Earth. Because it’s so faint, many amateur astronomers and skywatchers have never actually seen it themselves, but this mo

Related Books & Audiobooks