A solar-powered airplane finished crossing the United States on Saturday, landing in New York City after flying over the Statue of Liberty during its historic bid to circle the globe, the project team said. The spindly, single-seat experimental aircraft, dubbed Solar Impulse 2, arrived at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport at about 4 a.m. local time after it took off about five hours beforehand at Lehigh Valley International Airport in Pennsylvania, the team reported on the airplane's website. Such a pleasure to land in New York! For the 14th time we celebrate sustainability," said the project's co-founder Andre Borschberg on Twitter after flying over the city and the Statue of Liberty during the 14th leg of the trip around the globe. The Swiss team flying the aircraft in a campaign to build support for clean energy technologies hopes eventually to complete its circumnavigation in Abu Dhabi, where the journey began in March 2015. The solar cr...
Galileo Galilei was born
on February 15, 1564, in Pisa, Italy, Galileo Galilei was a mathematics
professor who made pioneering observations of nature with long-lasting
implications for the study of physics. He also constructed a telescope
and supported the Copernican theory, which supports a sun-centered solar
system. Galileo was accused twice of heresy by the church for his
beliefs, and wrote books on his ideas. He died in Arcetri, Italy, on
January 8, 1642.
In
1583, Galileo entered the University of Pisa to study medicine. Armed
with high intelligence and talent, he soon became fascinated with many
subjects, particularly mathematics and physics. While at Pisa, Galileo
was exposed to the Aristotelian view of the world, then the leading
scientific authority and the only one sanctioned by the Roman Catholic
Church. At first, Galileo supported this view, like any other
intellectual of his time, and was on track to be a university professor.
However, due to financial difficulties, Galileo left the university in
1585 before earning his degree.
Galileo
continued to study mathematics, supporting himself with
minor teaching
positions. During this time he began his two-decade study on objects
in motion and published The Little Balance, describing the
hydrostatic principles of weighing small quantities, which brought him
some fame. This gained him a teaching post at the University of Pisa,
in 1589. There Galileo conducted his fabled experiments with falling
objects and produced his manuscript Du Motu (On Motion),
a departure from Aristotelian views about motion and falling objects.
Galileo developed an arrogance about his work, and his strident
criticisms of Aristotle left him isolated among his colleagues. In 1592,
his contract with the University of Pisa was not renewed.
Galileo
quickly found a new position at the University of Padua, teaching
geometry, mechanics and astronomy. The appointment was fortunate, for
his father had died in 1591, leaving Galileo entrusted with the care of
his younger brother Michelagnolo. During his 18-year tenure at Padua,
he gave entertaining lectures and attracted large crowds of followers,
further increasing his fame and his sense of mission.
In 1604, Galileo published The Operations of the Geometrical and
Military Compass,
revealing his skills with experiments and practical technological
applications. He also constructed a hydrostatic balance for measuring
smallThese
developments brought him additional income and more recognition. That
same year, Galileo refined his theories on motion and falling objects,
and developed the universal law of acceleration, which all objects in
the universe obeyed. Galileo began to express openly his support of the
Copernican theory that the earth and planets revolved around the sun.
This challenged the doctrine of Aristotle and the established order set
by the Catholic Church.
In July 1609, Galileo learned about a
simple telescope built by Dutch eyeglass makers, and he soon developed
one of his own. In August, he demonstrated it to some Venetian
merchants, who saw its value for spotting ships and gave Galileo salary
to manufacture several of them. However, Galileo’s ambition pushed him
to go further, and in the fall of 1609 he made the fateful decision to
turn his telescope toward the heavens. In March 1610, he published a
small booklet, The Starry Messenger, revealing his discoveries
that the moon was not flat and smooth, but a sphere with mountains and
craters. He found Venus had phases like the moon, proving it rotated
around the sun. He also discovered Jupiter had revolving moons, which
didn’t revolve around the earth.
Soon Galileo began mounting a
body of evidence that supported Copernican theory and contradicted
Aristotle and Church doctrine. In 1612, he published his Discourse on Bodies in Water,
refuting the Aristotelian explanation of why objects float in water,
saying that it wasn’t because of their flat shape, but instead the
weight of the object in relation to the water it displaced. In 1613, he
published his observations of sunspots, which further refuted
Aristotelian doctrine that the sun was perfect. That same year, Galileo
wrote a letter to a student to explain how Copernican theory did not
contradict Biblical passages, stating that scripture was written from
an earthly perspective and implied that science provided a different,
more accurate perspective. The letter was made public and Church
Inquisition consultants pronounced Copernican theory heretical. In
1616, Galileo was ordered not to “hold, teach, or defend in any manner”
the Copernican theory regarding the motion of the earth. Galileo
obeyed the order for seven years, partly to make life easier and partly
because he was a devoted Catholic.
In 1623, a friend of
Galileo, Cardinal Maffeo Barberini, was selected as Pope Urban VIII. He
allowed Galileo to pursue his work on astronomy and even encouraged
him to publish it, on condition it be objective and not advocate
Copernican theory. In 1632, Galileo published the Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems,
a discussion among three people: one who supports Copernicus'
heliocentric theory of the universe, one who argues against it, and one
who is impartial. Though Galileo claimed Dialogues was
neutral, it was clearly not. The advocate of Aristotelian belief comes
across as the simpleton, getting caught in his own arguments.
Galileo
died in Arcetri, near Florence, Italy, on January 8, 1642, after
suffering from a fever and heart palpitations. But in time, the Church
couldn’t deny the truth in science. In 1758, it lifted the ban on most
works supporting Copernican theory, and by 1835 dropped its opposition
to heliocentrism altogether.
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