1609 in science
The year 1609 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Astronomy
- July 26 – English scientist Thomas Harriot becomes the first to draw an astronomical object after viewing it through a telescope: he draws a map of the Moon, preceding Galileo by several months.
- Johannes Kepler publishes Astronomia nova, containing his first two laws of planetary motion.
Biology
- Charles Butler publishes The Feminine Monarchie, or, A Treatise Concerning Bees.
Exploration
- April 4 – Henry Hudson sets out from Amsterdam in the Halve Maen.
- * August 28 – Hudson finds Delaware Bay.
- * September 11–12 – Hudson sails into Upper New York Bay and begins a journey up the Hudson River.
Medicine
- Louise Bourgeois Boursier publishes Diverse Observations on Sterility; Loss of the Ovum after Fecundation, Fecundity and Childbirth; Diseases of Women and of Newborn Infants in Paris, the first book on obstetrics written by a woman.
- Jacques Guillemeau publishes De l'heureux accouchement des femmes in which he describes a method of assisted breech delivery.
Technology
- Cornelius Drebbel invents the thermostat.
Births
- June 29 – Pierre Paul Riquet, French engineer and canal builder
- October 8 – John Clarke, English physician
Deaths
- March 26 – John Dee, English alchemist, astrologer and mathematician
- April 4 – Carolus Clusius, Flemish botanist
- August 4 - Joseph Duchesne, French physician and alchemist
- December – Oswald Croll, German iatrochemist
- André du Laurens, French physician and gerontologist