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  1. Benedetto Castelli ha sido considerado en Italia como “padre de la Hidráulica” y la fórmula 2 se ha conocido como “ley de Castelli”. Esta atribución ha sido posteriormente controvertida, porque otros antes que él habían tenido un conocimiento por lo menos parcial de ella; por ejemplo Leonardo ya había enunciado claramente la ...

  2. 24 de oct. de 2018 · For example, it can explain why, despite the pressing request of the inquisitors, Benedetto Castelli never delivered the original letter in his possession. 16 He would have had to hand over to the inquisitors the very same version sent to Rome by Niccolò Lorini, a fierce opponent of his friend and teacher Galileo.

  3. Benedetto Castelli (1578-1643) 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 ...

  4. Ritratto di Benedetto Castelli, di autore anonimo di ambito fiorentino, anteriore al 1640. Benedetto Castelli, al secolo Antonio Castelli ( Brescia, 1578 – Roma, 9 aprile 1643 ), è stato un monaco cristiano, matematico e fisico italiano .

  5. Benedetto Castelli (né en 1577 à Brescia en Lombardie - mort le 9 avril 1643 à Rome) est un moine bénédictin, mathématicien et physicien italien. Biographie [ modifier | modifier le code ] Cette section est vide, insuffisamment détaillée ou incomplète.

  6. 24 de dic. de 2016 · Castelli, Benedetto (Antonio) Born Brescia, (Italy), 1578. Died Rome, (Italy), 19 April 1643. Benedetto Castelli was one of Galileo Galilei ’s principal collaborators, an important academic physicist, and a contributor to the diffusion of Copernicanism in the seventeenth century. He entered the Benedictine order at Brescia in 1575, taking the ...

  7. 21 de dic. de 2021 · Benedetto Castelli, an Italian Benedictine monk and mathematical scientist, was born sometime in 1578, in Brescia, in northern Italy. He entered the Benedictine order at Monte Cassino in 1595, when he was 17. He was in Padua in March of 1610 when Galileo Galilei, a teacher at Padua, published his Sidereus nuncius, announcing that the moon has ...