In his gravity experiment Galileo dropped objects form the Leaning Tower of Pisa, in Italy.
Galileo experimented with gravity. Newton merely explained how it works, and showed that if his formula is correct, then that explains why the planets move the way they actually do. He may never have needed to experiment.
The famous scientist whom we usually refer to as Galileo was named, in full, Galileo Galilei. His first name actually was Galileo.
Galileo had the first idea, although Newton takes credit for it because of his perfection the matter.
Galileo
1st Galileo introduced systematic quantitative experiment to physics.2nd Galileo promoted mathematics as the language of physics.The great book of Nature lies ever open before our eyes and the true philosophy is written in it... But we cannot read it unless we have first learned the language and the characters in which it is written... It is written in mathematical language and the characters are triangles, circles, and other geometrical figures..Galilieo: Saggiatore, Opere VI, p232
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Galileo experimented with gravity. Newton merely explained how it works, and showed that if his formula is correct, then that explains why the planets move the way they actually do. He may never have needed to experiment.
Sir Isaac Newton was the first to postulate gravity as we know it; a force exerted by anything with mass on anything else with mass, according to the product of the masses used and inversely according to the square of the distance between them
Galileo was a physicist who discovered what would hit the ground first. A small metal ball or a large metal ball. He discovered it did not matter due to gravity pushing them to the ground.
The famous scientist whom we usually refer to as Galileo was named, in full, Galileo Galilei. His first name actually was Galileo.
Galileo Galilei was the first to conduct experiments on the effect of gravity on falling objects. He demonstrated that objects of different masses fall at the same rate in the absence of air resistance, challenging the common belief at the time.
The value of acceleration due to gravity was first accurately measured by Galileo Galilei in the late 16th century through his experiments with falling objects.
Sir Isaac Newton is credited with conducting experiments and developing the theory of gravity in the late 17th century. His work on gravity culminated in his famous publication "Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica" in 1687.
The first recorded experiment to verify this was Galileo. In 1542, a century before Galileo, Bendetto Varchi published experimental results showing this to be true.