The Scientific Revolution

By karly12
  • 1543

    Nicolaus Copernicus

    Nicolaus Copernicus
    Copernicus published his findings on the idea of a solar system that revolved around the sun. His ideas went against several religious beliefs, so he waited until he was near death to publish his book, On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Bodies.
  • 1543

    Andreas Vesalius

    Andreas Vesalius
    Vesalius dissected human corpses and provided detailed sketches of the human anatomy in his book, On the Fabric of the Human Body.
  • Zacharias Janssen

    Zacharias Janssen
    Janssen created the first microscope in history.
  • Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler

    Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler
    Brahe studied patterns of the planets and collected important data that his assistant, Kepler, followed up on after Brahe passed. After studying Brahe's data, Kepler came to the conclusion that planets orbit the sun in elliptical pathways rather than in circles. However, his greatest finding was mathematically proving Copernicus's heliocentric theory.
  • Galileo Galilei

    Galileo Galilei
    Galileo used a telescope to study the sky. After spending a great deal of time observing the solar system, Galileo published newsletter titled Starry Messenger. In the newsletters, he described features he saw on various planets. His observations eventually lead to issues with religious groups that the ideas he described challenged.
  • William Harvey

    William Harvey
    Following up on Vesalius's work, Harvey published On the
    Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals to demonstrate how several bodily functions work.
  • Evangelista Torricelli

    Evangelista Torricelli
    Torricelli was a student of Galileo's who invented the first mercury barometer, a scientific tool used to measure atmospheric pressure and predict wind.
  • Robert Boyle

    Robert Boyle
    Boyle published a book titled, The Sceptical
    Chymist which challenged ideas of Aristotle. He produced the idea of Boyle's law which explained the affects volume, pressure of gas, and temperature on each other.
  • Isaac Newton

    Isaac Newton
    Newton published his book, Mathematical Principles of
    Natural Philosophy, which impacted the scientific world for years to come. In it, he described the solar system to be very similar to a clock.
  • Gabriel Fahrenheit

    Gabriel Fahrenheit
    Fahrenheit created the first thermometer with mercury in glass. The thermometer measured water as freezing at 32 degrees.
  • Anders Celsius

    Anders Celsius
    Celsius created a different scale for mercury thermometers that measured water to be freezing at zero degrees.