Jean-Bernard Foucault was born on this date in 1819.
The stars appear to move in circles about a line through
the poles of the earth. An ancient explanation of this (probably predating
classical Greece) is that the stars are attached to a sphere, which rotates about
the earth. Aristarchus of Samos (third century BC) explained the apparent
motion of the stars and planets by proposing that the earth turns on its own
axis and also travels around the sun. Hipparchus (second century BC) and
Ptolemy (second century AD) rejected this view for two reasons. First, one
cannot feel the rotation of the earth. Second, one cannot (without powerful
telescopes) see annual changes in the relative position of the stars. The
earth-centred view dominated European science until the seventeenth century.
Whether or not the earth moves used to be an important
question for Christians, as well as cosmologists. Giordano Bruno taught that
the earth moved. He held a range of heretical views and was charged by the Holy
Inquisition in Venice. He was sentenced by Pope Clement VIII and was burned
alive, with his tongue gagged, in 1600. Galileo also taught that the Earth
moved. He was charged with the same heresy in 1633 but he was spared on
condition that he renounced his views. (The Vatican has since changed its
position: in 1992 Pope John Paul II officially expressed regret at the church's
treatment of Galileo.)
The observation of Hipparchus and Ptolemy that one cannot
feel the rotation of the earth is correct. However, the rate of rotation required
for the heliocentric picture (0.0007 revolutions per minute) is so slow that
one would not expect to feel it. How can one measure such a slow rotation? In
1851, Jean-Bernard-Leon Foucault suspended a 67 metre, 28 kilogram
pendulum from the dome of the Pantheon in Paris. The plane of its motion, with
respect to the earth, rotated slowly clockwise. This motion is most easily
explained if the earth turns.
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