Galileo's mission goals is that he wanted to increase awareness of scientific thought and, in the process, rescue the Catholic Church from its ostrich-like refusal to see the cosmos as it really was. Hope this helped.^-^
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galileo bid reach his goal by making the telescope
Yes, there are several things named after Galileo Galilei, including the Galilean moons of Jupiter (Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto), the Galileo spacecraft mission to Jupiter, the Galileo space probe, and the Galileo thermometer. In addition, there are institutions, awards, and concepts in various fields that bear his name in honor of his contributions to science.
No, Galileo was an unmanned spacecraft that was launched by NASA in 1989 to study the planet Jupiter and its moons. It did not carry any astronauts on board.
You can find reliable information about Galileo on websites like NASA's Galileo Mission page, the European Space Agency's Galileo Navigation page, or academic websites like those of universities with astronomy or physics departments. Be sure to verify the credibility of the source before relying on the information provided.
to the moon
pooo
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yes you stupd dork
The Galileo space craft was launched on Oct 18, 1989 and was crashed into Jupiter on Sept. 21, 2003. This was the end of 14 year space mission.
galileo bid reach his goal by making the telescope
to reach a certain height
Super Why - 2007 Galileo's Space Adventure and other stories Galileo's Space Adventure 7-17 was released on: USA: October 2012
STS-34 used Atlantis for the mission.
The Space Probe Galileo was put into orbit around the planet Jupiter
No. Nothing can land on Jupiter as it does not have a solid surface. The Galileo spacecraft orbited Jupiter from 1995 until 2002. In 1995 an atmospheric probe with the Galileo mission entered Jupiter's atmosphere to study it. The probe eventually melted as it entered the superheated layers deep in Jupiter's atmosphere. In 2002 the main Galileo space probe burned up in Jupiter's atmosphere at the end of its mission.
Yes, there are several things named after Galileo Galilei, including the Galilean moons of Jupiter (Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto), the Galileo spacecraft mission to Jupiter, the Galileo space probe, and the Galileo thermometer. In addition, there are institutions, awards, and concepts in various fields that bear his name in honor of his contributions to science.