| Galileo Discovers a New Planet  by Jeff Provine 
     Author 
    says: what if Galileo had paid more attention to the "dim star" of 
    Neptune? muses Jeff Provine's on his excellent blog
    This Day in 
    Alternate History. Please note that the opinions expressed in this post 
    do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). 
     
      On December 28th 1612,
     
      Please click the
        
        
          
           icon to follow us on Facebook.on this day the Italian physicist, 
        
        mathematician, astronomer and philosopher Galileo Galilei discovered a new 
        
        planet. 
 Known as the “Father of Modern Astronomy,” “Father of Modern Physics,” and 
        
        “Father of Modern Science,” Galileo Galilei led mankind in a great many 
        
        discoveries, even that there were more planets to the cosmos than the five 
        
        that had been charted since ancient times. While principally supported by 
        
        patrons, he also had side-incomes from improving compasses and building 
        
        telescopes. It was with his telescopes that Galileo would discern many 
        
        secrets of the universe.
 
 In January of 1610, Galileo discovered the four Galilean moons of Jupiter, 
        
        the first solid description of a celestial object orbiting another. He at 
        
        first took them for stars, but careful calculation proved that they were, 
        
        in fact, moons like our own. It called into question the Aristotelian 
        
        geocentric cosmos that has always been accepted, even with the 
        
        understanding of a round Earth. That September, he discovered the phases 
        
        of the planet Venus, which would fully discredit Aristotle and launch a 
        
        new design by astronomical Tycho Brahe with a fixed Earth being orbited by 
        
        the Sun, around which Mercury and Venus orbited.
 
 "Probably right. Gslileo had practically no people 
          
          skills, and even managed to alienate other scientists by sniping at them 
          
          when they happened to disagree with him, even when they happened to be 
          
          right." - reader's commentsGalileo became a celebrity around Europe 
        
        and received many graces in Rome, especially from the Catholic Church who 
        
        applauded his study of the wonders of Creation. Galileo, however, had 
        
        opinions outside of the Church-recognized Tychonic system and pushed for 
        
        recognition of a heliocentric universe. He searched for a way to prove the 
        
        theory and constantly studied the skies.
 
 In late 1612, Galileo came across another celestial object he took as a 
        
        dim fixed star. A month later, he observed it again, and the star came to 
        
        fascinate him. Over coming months, he watched it carefully, seeing it move 
        
        ever so slightly that he could not be certain of his instruments. After 
        
        some time, it became obvious that the star was moving in retrograde, 
        
        meaning it had to be a planet like Mars or Jupiter. While Galileo felt 
        
        certain that was the cause, his principles of observational science forced 
        
        him to note that it may also have been a comet.
 
 He busied himself with studies of sunspots and lunar mountains, but the 
        
        strange “star” haunted him. Swallowing his pride, he took to the German 
        
        Johannes Kepler’s suggestion of a convex lens as the eyepiece rather than 
        
        Galileo’s concave one. The viewer suffered an inverted image, but the 
        
        improved image astounded Galileo. During their correspondence on light 
        
        refraction, Kelper was also able to convince Galileo of the lunar cause of 
        
        tides, something Galileo always found fictitious as the tides were 
        
        supposedly due to the movement of the Earth.
 
 As Galileo was coming to appreciate the works of other scientists in his 
        
        age and being baffled by what he would later recognize as the rings of 
        
        Saturn, he wrote of new humility in letters to his daughter Virginia, now 
        
        Sister Maria Celeste. Still, he felt that science must be kept pure, and 
        
        he approached Rome in defense of Copernican ideals. Galileo was ordered by 
        
        Cardinal Bellarmine and the Inquisition not to hold or defend 
        
        heliocentrism. Admitting that without solid proof both were guesses, 
        
        Galileo decided to treat the Sun-centered universe as a hypothesis, just 
        
        as he would hold the Earth-centered one.
 
 In 1619, Galileo came into a long discussion with Father Orazio Grassi of 
        
        the Jesuit Collegio Romano about the nature of comets. While he felt great 
        
        frustration with what he saw as incorrect science, Galileo methodically 
        
        and politely arranged the discussion until finally admitting the planet he 
        
        had been charting for nearly seven years. The Jesuits were shocked at the 
        
        news, and Galileo conceded that the universe was much deeper than he had 
        
        imagined, even accepting that comets were more distant than the moon.
 
 Astronomers checked on Galileo’s planet, and confirmation came from 
        
        various astounded sources. Rome again applauded the great Galileo, who 
        
        named the planet Uranus after Saturn’s father. Riding his fame, Pope Urban 
        
        VIII asked Galileo to write a discussion of heliocentrism, which he did in 
        
        1632’s Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems. The book 
        
        stands as a model for fair and objective science to this day, ending with 
        
        the conclusion that, excepting to fly up into the sky and look down on 
        
        Earth’s foundations (if any), the question would be solved by discerning 
        
        parallax of the fixed stars in the sky as Earth rotated around the Sun.
 
 Such a feat would require a telescope of incredible magnitude and 
        
        precision, and astronomers would quest for another century to find one. In 
        
        the meantime, yet another planet would be discovered, this one closer than 
        
        Galileo’s Uranus. English astronomer John Flamsteed would dub it “Nox” in 
        
        1690.
 
 
        
        
        
        
 
     
     Author 
    says in reality Galileo would note the “dim star” but not notice it 
    sufficiently. He would be notoriously bigoted about his scientific opinions, 
    scoffing at Kepler and Grassi, even though they were correct about tides and 
    comets, respectively. His opinions clashed with those of the Church, and 
    Galileo would be forced to recant heliocentrism and spend the rest of his 
    life under house arrest. Uranus would be mistaken by John Flamsteed as a 
    star and not determined as a planet until William Herschel in 1781. Neptune, 
    though observed by Galileo, would not be discovered until 1846 by Johann 
    Galle. To view guest historian's comments on this post please visit the
    
    Today in Alternate History web site. 
 
     Jeff Provine, Guest Historian of
    
    Today in Alternate History, a Daily Updating Blog of Important Events In 
    History That Never Occurred Today. Follow us on
    
    Facebook, Myspace and
    Twitter.  Imagine what would be, if history had occurred a bit 
    differently. Who says it didn't, somewhere? These fictional news items 
    explore that possibility. Possibilities such as America becoming a Marxist 
    superpower, aliens influencing human history in the 18th century and Teddy 
    Roosevelt winning his 3rd term as president abound in this interesting 
    fictional blog. 
 
 
    
    Sitemetre  
    
     |