Museo Galileo
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Galileo's astronomy
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The first evidence of Galileo's espousal of heliocentrism came in a letter to Kepler of 1597, in which he described himself as a long-standing Copernican. His astronomical discoveries of 1610, achieved thanks to the telescope, thus came as a confirmation of earlier-held beliefs. With the Sidereus Nuncius, Galileo inaugurated modern cosmology. He showed that the Moon had Earth-like valleys and mountains; that the Milky Way is not a denser part of the heavens, but an impressive array of stars; and that Jupiter is surrounded by four satellites. These discoveries destroyed the very foundations of Aristotelian-Ptolemaic cosmology. Later, Galileo made other extraordinary observations that bolstered his Copernican faith: the strange appearances of Saturn, the phases of Venus, and sunspots.

Objects
Galileo's objective lens

Galileo's objective lens

Inv. 2429
Vittorio Crosten (frame), lens: late 1609 - early 1610 / frame: 1677

Galileo's telescope

Galileo's telescope

Inv. 2427
Galileo Galilei, Italian, ca. 1610

Galileo's telescope

Galileo's telescope

Inv. 2428
Galileo Galilei, Italian, late 1609 - early 1610

Jovilabe

Jovilabe

Inv. 3178
Maker unknown, second half 17th cent.

Middle finger of Galileo's right hand

Middle finger of Galileo's right hand

Inv. 2432
Author unknown, Stand, case, and inscription: ca. 1737

Sidereus Nuncius, Galileo Galilei (facsimile)

Sidereus Nuncius, Galileo Galilei (facsimile)

Firenze, Biblioteca nazionale centrale, Post. 110
Galileo Galilei, Padua, original 1610 / facsimile 2010