1618 in science
The year 1618 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Astronomy
- March 8 – May 15 – Johannes Kepler formulates the third law of planetary motion.
- July 21 – Pluto reaches an aphelion. It next comes to aphelion in 1866.
- Johann Baptist Cysat, Swiss Jesuit geometer and astronomer and one of Christoph Scheiner's pupils, becomes the first to study a comet through the telescope and gives the first description of the nucleus and coma of a comet.
- September 6–25 – The Great Comet of 1618 is visible to the naked eye. James I described it as "Venus with a firebrand in her arse".
Biology
- Fortunio Liceti's De spontaneo Viventium Ortu supports the theory of spontaneous generation of organisms.
Medicine
- The College of Physicians of London publishes the Pharmacopœia Londinensis.
Births
- April 2 – Francesco Maria Grimaldi, Italian physicist, discoverer of the diffraction of light
- Jeremiah Horrocks, English astronomer
Deaths
- June 6 – Sir James Lancaster, English navigator
- October 29 – Walter Ralegh, English explorer
- Luca Valerio, Italian mathematician