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A brief biography of Benedetto Castelli (1578-1643).

Benedetto Castelli

Antonio Castelli was born in Brescia, Italy, in 1578 and took the name Benedetto upon entering the Benedictine order in 1595. From perhaps 1604 to 1607 he lived in a monastery in Padua and studied under Galileo. Upon receiving a copy of Sidereus Nuncius , in Brescia in 1610, he applied for a transfer to Florence , where he arrived in 1611. Castelli helped see Galileo's Discourse on Floating Bodies through the press and published the reply (largely written by Galileo) to the polemics against it. Castelli was also active in the initial stages of Galileo's sunspot research in 1612, coming up with the method of projecting the Sun's image through the telescope.

Upon Galileo's recommendation, Castelli was appointed professor of mathematics at the university of Pisa in 1613. When the court was visiting Pisa, late that year, Castelli was invited to dinner and became involved in a lengthy after-dinner discussion about the merits of the Copernican System . Castelli presented Galileo's arguments about reconciling the Copernican theory with certain biblical passages, e.g. in the book of Joshua. It was this occasion that prompted Galileo to write a long letter to Castelli on the subject of science and religion, which was later expanded into the Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina . Both versions of the letter circulated in manuscript, and the Letter to the Grand Duchess was printed in Strasbourg in 1636.

Castelli moved to Rome in 1626 to become a consultant to the Pope on the management of rivers in the Papal States (a perennial problem) and professor of mathematics at the university of Rome. In 1628 he published the important work on hydraulics, Della Misura dell'Acque Correnti , or "On the Measurement of Running Waters," a book that may be considered the foundation of modern hydrodynamics. Castelli also made important discoveries about illumination (independently formulating the photometric law), vision, after-images, and diaphragms in telescopes. He was also a pioneer in the study of differential absorption of heat by different colors. To the end, he was a faithful friend of Galileo.

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Source:  OpenStax, Galileo project. OpenStax CNX. Jul 07, 2004 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10234/1.1
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