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Main Author: De Angelis, Alessandro
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.15884
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author De Angelis, Alessandro
author_facet De Angelis, Alessandro
contents In 1492, for the first time, an unknown ocean opened up before sailors: weeks of navigation and no idea how to pinpoint their location. Since ancient times, navigators had known how to determine latitude by using the North Star, but the "problem of longitude" was different. More than a century later, Galileo Galilei discovered in Padua Jupiter's satellites and quickly realized that a sailor who could observe their eclipses would know his own longitude. Yet his brilliant insight was 400 years ahead of the technology of his time. Impractical at sea, on land this idea became a formidable tool for cartography and ushered in the age of the image of the world. Today the technique can be realized thanks to artificial satellites, and the Tuscan genius' name has reached space with the European satellite system named Galileo. An exhibition in Paris, organized by the Permanent Representation of Italy to the International Organizations, Sorbonne University, and the Galileo Museum in Florence, and directed by Asia Ruffo di Calabria of the Musee des Arts et Metiers, by Quentin Cheval-Galland of the Sorbonne University, and by Alessandro De Angelis, allowed visitors to observe inventions of the time and some writings by Galileo on the theme of geolocation. The exhibition was held in Paris in June 2024. It was replicated in Prague in October 2024, in Amsterdam in December 2025, and at the Perimeter Institute in Waterloo, Canada, in February 2025.
format Preprint
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Galileo Galilei and Satellite Navigation
De Angelis, Alessandro
History and Philosophy of Physics
In 1492, for the first time, an unknown ocean opened up before sailors: weeks of navigation and no idea how to pinpoint their location. Since ancient times, navigators had known how to determine latitude by using the North Star, but the "problem of longitude" was different. More than a century later, Galileo Galilei discovered in Padua Jupiter's satellites and quickly realized that a sailor who could observe their eclipses would know his own longitude. Yet his brilliant insight was 400 years ahead of the technology of his time. Impractical at sea, on land this idea became a formidable tool for cartography and ushered in the age of the image of the world. Today the technique can be realized thanks to artificial satellites, and the Tuscan genius' name has reached space with the European satellite system named Galileo. An exhibition in Paris, organized by the Permanent Representation of Italy to the International Organizations, Sorbonne University, and the Galileo Museum in Florence, and directed by Asia Ruffo di Calabria of the Musee des Arts et Metiers, by Quentin Cheval-Galland of the Sorbonne University, and by Alessandro De Angelis, allowed visitors to observe inventions of the time and some writings by Galileo on the theme of geolocation. The exhibition was held in Paris in June 2024. It was replicated in Prague in October 2024, in Amsterdam in December 2025, and at the Perimeter Institute in Waterloo, Canada, in February 2025.
title Galileo Galilei and Satellite Navigation
topic History and Philosophy of Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.15884