Sidereus Nuncius (usually Sidereal Messenger, also Starry Messenger or Sidereal Message) is a short astronomical treatise (or pamphlet) published in Neo-Latin by Galileo Galilei on March 13, 1610. It was the first published scientific work based on observations made through a telescope, and it contains the results of Galileo's early observations of the imperfect and mountainous Moon, of hundreds of stars not visible to the naked eye in the Milky Way and in certain constellations, and of the Medicean Stars (Galilean moons) that appeared to be circling Jupiter.

The Latin word nuncius was typically used during this time period to denote messenger; however, it was also (though less frequently) rendered as message. Though the title Sidereus Nuncius is usually translated into English as Sidereal Messenger, many of Galileo's early drafts of the book and later related writings indicate that the intended purpose of the book was "simply to report the news about recent developments in astronomy, not to pass himself off solemnly as an ambassador from heaven."

Telescope

The first telescopes appeared in the Netherlands in 1608, when Middelburg spectacle-maker Hans Lippershey tried to obtain a patent on one. By 1609 Galileo had learned of this and built his own improved version. He was not the first person to aim the new invention at the night sky but his was the first published study of celestial bodies using one. One of Galileo's first telescopes had 8x to 10x linear magnification and was made out of lenses that he had ground himself. This was increased to 20x linear magnification in the improved telescope he used to make the observations in Sidereus Nuncius. Also, when he observed some of the "nebulous" stars in the Ptolemaic star catalogue, he saw that rather than being cloudy, they were made of many small stars. From this he deduced that the nebulae and the Milky Way were "congeries of innumerable stars grouped together in clusters" too small and distant to be resolved into individual stars by the naked eye.

In his drawings, Galileo used an open circle to represent Jupiter and asterisks to represent the four stars. He made this distinction to show that there was in fact a difference between these two types of celestial bodies. Galileo used the terms planet and star interchangeably, and "both words were correct usage within the prevailing Aristotelian terminology."

At the time of Sidereus Nuncius publication, Galileo was a mathematician at the University of Padua and had recently received a lifetime contract for his work in building more powerful telescopes. He desired to return to Florence, and in hopes of gaining patronage there, he dedicated Sidereus Nuncius to his former pupil, now the Grand Duke of Tuscany, Cosimo II de' Medici. In addition, he named his discovered four moons of Jupiter the "Medicean Stars," in honor of the four royal Medici brothers.), Lodovico Cigoli's Assumption of the Virgin (1612), and Andrea Sacchi's Divine Wisdom (1631). By naming the four moons after the Medici brothers and convincing the Grand Duke Cosimo II of his discoveries, the defence of Galileo's reports became a matter of State. Moran notes, "the court itself became actively involved in pursuing the confirmation of Galileo's observations by paying Galileo out of its treasury to manufacture spyglasses that could be sent through ambassadorial channels to the major courts of Europe". The secretary to Giovanni Antonio Magini, a Bohemian astronomer named Martin Horký, published an incendiary pamphlet criticizing the Sidereus Nuncius, alleging in it that Galileo's observations were the result of poor lenses and influenced by personal ambitions. After gaining some traction in Italy, however, Horky's work was ultimately strongly rebutted.

The first astronomer to publicly support Galileo's findings was Johannes Kepler, who published an open letter in April 1610, enthusiastically endorsing Galileo's credibility. It was not until August 1610 that Kepler was able to publish his independent confirmation of Galileo's findings, due to the scarcity of sufficiently powerful telescopes.

Several astronomers, such as Thomas Harriot, Joseph Gaultier de la Vatelle, Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc, and Simon Marius, published their confirmation of the Medicean Stars after Jupiter became visible again in the autumn of 1610. Marius, a German astronomer who had studied with Tycho Brahe, was the first to publish a book of his observations. Marius attacked Galileo in Mundus Jovialis (published in 1614) by insisting that he had found Jupiter's four moons before Galileo and had been observing them since 1609. Marius believed that he therefore had the right to name them, which he did: he named them after Jupiter's love conquests: Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. But Galileo was not confounded; he pointed out that being outside the Church, Marius had not yet accepted the Gregorian calendar and was still using the Julian calendar. Therefore, the night Galileo first observed Jupiter's moons was January 7, 1610 on the Gregorian calendar—December 28, 1609 on the Julian calendar (Marius claimed to have first observed Jupiter's moons on December 29, 1609). However, once Galileo began to speak of the Copernican system as fact rather than theory, it introduced "a more chaotic system, a less-than-godly lack of organization." In fact, the Copernican system that Galileo believed to be real was interpreted by the Catholic leadership as a challenge to the Scriptures, "which referred to the sun 'rising' and the earth as 'unmoving.); translation with introduction, conclusion and notes. Galileo Galilei, Sidereus Nuncius, or The Sidereal Messenger. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1989. xiii + 127 pp. .

  • William R. Shea and Tiziana Bascelli; translated from the Latin by William R. Shea, introduction and notes by William R. Shea and Tiziana Bascelli. Galileo's Sidereus Nuncius or Sidereal Message. Sagamore Beach, MA: Science History Publications/USA, 2009. viii + 115 pp. .

French

  • Isabelle Pantin. Sidereus Nuncius: Le Messager Céleste. Paris: Belles Lettres, 1992. ASIN B0028S7JLK.
  • Fernand Hallyn. Le messager des étoiles. France: Points, 1992. .

German

  • Anna Mudry. Sternenbotschaft, in Galilei Galilei: Schriften, Briefe, Dokumente, Band 1, pp. 94–144. Berlin: Rütten & Loening, 1987.
  • Hans Blumenberg. Sidereus Nuncius. Nachricht von neuen Sternen. Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1980.

Italian

  • Maria Timpanaro Cardini. Sidereus nuncius. Firenze: Sansoni, 1948.

See also

  • Discourse on Comets
  • Letters on Sunspots
  • Nuncius (journal)
  • Selenographia, sive Lunae descriptio

References

  • Sidereus Nuncius 1610. From Rare Book Room. Photographed first edition.
  • Sidereus Nuncius, in Latin in HTML format, or in Italian in pdf format or odt format. From LiberLiber.
  • Linda Hall Library has a scanned first edition, as well as a scanned pirated edition from Frankfurt, also from 1610.
  • Sidereus nuncius (Adams.5.61.1) Full digital edition in Cambridge Digital Library.
  • The Sidereal Messenger of Galileo Galilei in English at Project Gutenberg.
  • Sidereus nuncius Full digital edition in the Stanford Libraries.