In his famous leaning tower demonstration, Galileo discredited Aristotle's idea that the speed of a falling object is proportional to its weight. Aristotle believed that heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones. Galileo's experiments showed that, in the absence of air resistance, all objects fall at the same rate regardless of their mass, demonstrating that the acceleration due to gravity is constant for all objects. This pivotal insight laid the groundwork for modern physics and our understanding of motion.
yes.
Galileo did.
Galileo
"Galileo was the first to really discredit Aristotle's laws. He did this by postulating that heavier objects would hit the ground at the same time as lighter objects, when dropped from the same height. He proved this with a famous demonstration where he dropped two balls of different weights from the leaning tower of Pisa. The balls hit the ground at the same time. Galileo also came up with the idea of inertia. Rather than take Aristotle's view that and object must have a force acting on it to keep moving, Galileo said that an object would move continuously in a straight line as long as no outside forces acted on it."
Galileo was from Italy, so he went to the highest tower he could.
Galileo
Galileo carried out his first experiment on gravity by dropping weights from the Leaning Tower of Pisa in Italy. This famous experiment is said to have demonstrated that objects of different masses fall at the same rate due to gravity.
he made it that's where he was born
tomato from the leaning tower of pisa
Galileo Galilei is credited with the famous experiment of dropping objects of different masses from the Leaning Tower of Pisa, demonstrating that they all fall at the same acceleration due to gravity. This experiment helped establish the theory of uniform acceleration and paved the way for Isaac Newton's laws of motion.
"Galileo was the first to really discredit Aristotle's laws. He did this by postulating that heavier objects would hit the ground at the same time as lighter objects, when dropped from the same height. He proved this with a famous demonstration where he dropped two balls of different weights from the leaning tower of Pisa. The balls hit the ground at the same time. Galileo also came up with the idea of inertia. Rather than take Aristotle's view that and object must have a force acting on it to keep moving, Galileo said that an object would move continuously in a straight line as long as no outside forces acted on it."
He tested it standing on top of the leaning tower of Pisa.