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Astronomers Celebrate “Galilean Night”

Astronomers Celebrate “Galilean Night”

October 22, 2009 By Michael Hickerson 1 Comment

Astronomers will all turning their eyes to the heavens for the next three nights in honor of Galileo, reports the Associated Press.

The “Galilean Nights” promoted by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) aim at giving hundreds of thousands of people the thrill of looking through a space telescope for the first time.

More than 1,000 public events in over 70 countries are being staged on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, according to the website galileannights.org.

In October 1609 Galileo Galilei began observations with a two-lens telescope that eventually led him to discover the four main satellites of Jupiter and realise that Earth’s Moon was pitted with craters and not a perfect sphere.

These and other discoveries led Galileo to conclude, like Nicolaus Copernicus, that Earth revolved around the Sun and not the other way around.

He was persecuted for heresy by the Vatican and forced to recant. The last ten years of his life were spent under house arrest.

Filed Under: Space News

About Michael Hickerson

Michael was a contributor to Slice of SciFi, as both a news curator and assistant editor, under the tutelage of former News Director Sam Sloan.

Comments

  1. Ken says

    October 22, 2009 at 7:50 pm

    My wife went to college at Millikin University in Illinois.
    We went there last wekend for homecoming and her 25th celebration.
    They had a party for her class in the science building.
    They have an really big telescope, 20″,
    We got to see Jupiter and 4 moons, Vega, and a binary star system.
    This was very cool.

    If you live near Decater, Il they have open telescope nights, I would highly recommend a visit on a clear night!

    https://www.millikin.edu/academics/cas/physicsastronomy/astronomy/Pages/Observatory.aspx

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