400 Years After Galileo: Celebrating the International Year of Astronomy

Galileo Galilei is credited with discovering the first four moons of Jupiter.
Galileo Galilei is credited with discovering the first four moons of Jupiter. (Image credit: NASA)

In early 2009, astronomers inaugurated the celebration of the International Year of Astronomy (IYA).

The IYA vision is to ?help the citizens of the world rediscover their place in the Universe through the day and night time sky, and thereby engage a personal sense of wonder and discovery.? The United Nations, several astronomical organizations and many countries declared 2009 as the year for this scientific and cultural celebration.

Galileo dedicated ?Sidereus Nuncius? to his patron, Cosimo de Medici II, fourth grand duke of Tuscany and named the four Jovian moons the Medicean stars. Today, of course, they are referred to as the Galilean moons or satellites. Appropriately, Galileo, not his patron, is honored in astronomy by his discovery.

Galileo discovered Jupiter's moons with a 30 power telescope that had all sorts of chromatic aberration (color smearing). Most backyard astronomers can pick out these moons easily. I look forward to picking out Galileo?s Medicean stars tonight in their dance about Jupiter. I recommend a bit of stargazing, with or without a ?looker,? as we all celebrate what humans have learned in the past 400 years looking up through telescopes.

?        Video - Galileo's Imperfect World: The Moon (Again)

?        New Astronomy: Romance Fades as Technology Takes Over

?        The Greatest Modern Minds

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Edna DeVore
Director of Education and Public Outreach, SETI Institute

 Edna DeVore is a science and astronomy educator and the former Director of Education and Public Outreach for the SETI Institute. She earned an undergraduate degree from the University of Pacific followed by a master's degree in instructional technology from San Jose State and a master's in astronomy from the University of Arizona. In 1992, Edna joined the SETI Institute, where she wrote features on space exploration, astrobiology and more, some of which appeared on Space.com. She was among the first principal investigators to propose projects to NASA's Office of Space Science and receive funding for educational programs. Edna went on to work on education and public outreach for NASA's Kepler space telescope and SOFIA flying telescope missions. Edna received numerous awards during her tenure at SETI, including NASA Honor Awards for her work on Kepler and SOFIA, and Aerospace Awareness Award for Women in Aerospace in 2005. Edna retired in 2013.