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Galileo's telescope Galileo and the Telescope
The science of astronomy took a huge leap forward in the first decade of the 1600s with the invention of the optical telescope and its use to study the night sky. Galileo Galilei did not invent the telescope but was the first to use it systematically to observe celestial objects and record his discoveries. His book, Sidereus nuncius or The Starry Messenger was first published in 1610 and made him famous. In it he reported on his observations of the Moon, Jupiter and the Milky Way. These and subsequent observations and his interpretations of them eventually led to the demise of the geocentric Ptolemaic model of the universe and the adoption of a heliocentric model as proposed in 1543 by Copernicus. Galileo's drawings of phases of the Moon. Question: What features are visible here that cannot be seen with the unaided eye? The basic tool that Galileo used was a crude refracting telescope. His initial version only magnified 8x but was soon refined to the 20x magnification he used for his observations for Sidereus nuncius. It had a convex objective lens and a concave eyepiece in a long tube. The main problem with his telescopes was their very narrow field of view, typically about half the width of the Moon. Galileo's ObservationsGalileo's drawing of the optical path of his telescope The earliest known sketch of a telescope, August 1609. One of Galileo's telescopes. The focal length is 1330 mm with a 26 mm aperture, it magnifies 14x. It has an objective bi-convex lens and a plano-concave eyepiece. Galileo made several key discoveries through his systematic use and refinement of the telescope. The MoonAccording to Aristotelian principles the Moon was above the sub-lunary sphere and in the heavens, hence should be perfect. He found the "surface of the moon to be not smooth, even and perfectly spherical,...,but on the contrary, to be uneven, rough, and crowded with depressions and bulges. And it is like the face of the earth itself, which is marked here and there with chains of mountains and depths of valleys." He calculated the heights of the mountains by measuring the lengths of their shadows and applying geometry. Moons of JupiterOne of Galileo's lunar drawings. Note the craters, mountains and mare or "seas". The terminator between lunar day and night is clearly seen down the centre. Observations of the planet Jupiter over successive night revealed four star-like objects in a line with it. The objects moved from night to night, sometimes disappearing behind or in front of the planet. Galileo correctly inferred that these objects were moons of Jupiter and orbited it just as our Moon orbits Earth. For the first time, objects had been observed orbiting another planet, thus weakening the hold of the Ptolemaic model. Today these four moons are known as the Galilean satellites; Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. The Phases of VenusGalileo's drawings of the moons of Jupiter of successive nights Venus was observed to go through a sequence of phases similar to the Moon. This could not be explained in the Ptolemaic model but could be accounted for by either the Sun-centered Copernican model or the Earth-centered Tychonic model that had the other planets orbiting the Sun as it orbited the Earth. Galileo rejected Tycho's model as an unnecessary hybrid and used the discovery to consolidate his support of the Copernican model. SunspotsAlong with contemporaries such as Thomas Harriot, David Frabicius and Christoph Scheiner, Galileo observed dark regions that appeared to move across the surface of the Sun. Debate centered on whether these were satellites of the Sun or actual spots on its surface. Galileo, in his Letters on Sunspots supported the sunspot interpretation and used it to show that the Sun was rotating. Its blemishes and imperfections again undermined the Aristotelian ideal of a perfect cosmos. "Appendages" on SaturnGalileo noted two appendages from the sides of Saturn. These disappeared then later reappeared. It was not until 1656 that the Dutch scientist, Christiaan Huygens correctly described them as rings. Stars in the Milky WayEven through a telescope the stars still appeared as points of light. Galileo suggested that this was due to their immense distance from Earth. This then eased the problem posed by the failure of astronomers to detect stellar parallax that was a consequence of Copernicus' model. On turning his telescope to the band of the Milky Way Galileo saw it resolved into thousands of hitherto unseen stars. This posed the question as to why there were invisible objects in the night sky? Further InformationMore stars are resolved in this drawing by Galileo of the Pleiades than are visible to the unaided eye.
There are numerous other books and web sites covering Galileo's work and the history of astronomy. Questions
المصدر: منتديات مدينة الاحلام Galileo's telescope galileo |
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galileo, telescope |
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Pictures -20- From Hubble Telescope Wallpapers | نادر جلال | قسم الصور | 3 | 25 - 12 - 2009 06:30 |
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