'That is no country for old men....Caught in that sensual music all neglect Monuments of unageing intellect.' W.B.Yeats 'Sailing To Byzantium.' 1926
Sunday, 4 March 2012
Britain is still a country for and says "Happy Birthday" to a very old and very British astronomer called Patrick Moore
Sir Patrick Moore, the astronomer, is 89 today and is the presenter of the longest running tv programme in the World called 'The Sky At NIght'.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZF4qyOPrcU
It started 55 years ago in 1957 where I saw it as a boy on black and white tv and since then it has run for 700 episodes.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006mk7h
Patrick puts the programme's longevity down to the fact that it was :
* cheap
* unlike anything else
* non-controversial and gets in nobody's way
* has a following of a million
Patrick has said :
* that the programme started at the beginning of the space age when the first satellite, 'Sputnik 1', went up and " People realised there was something in space and I just happened to be there".
* his "most exciting moment" came when the Russians used his charts of the parts of the Moon, normally out of view, called 'The Libration Zone' and promised to send him the pictures they took of the far side of the moon and was 'live on air' when the pictures came through.
* " I want to see collaboration everywhere between men, not just in space" but thought that "it won't happen in my lifetime."
His thoughts on the success of the programme in 2011 :
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12580474
What you possibly didn't know about about Patrick, that he :
* is an amateur astronomer, credited with having done more than any other to raise the profile of astronomy among the British general public and is co-founder and former President of the 'Society for Popular Astronomy' and author of over 70 books on astronomy he typed on a Woodstock typewriter made in 1908.
* is a self-taught musician and accomplished composer whose favourite genres are 19th century Viennese waltzes and marches who performed on the 1981 'Royal Variety Performance', playing a xylophone solo.
* in the Second World War in 1939 , lied about his age in order to join the Royal Air Force, was trained in Canada where he met Albert Einstein and Orville Wright while on leave in New York and then and served as a navigator in RAF Bomber Command, reaching the rank of Flight Lieutenant.
* had his only romance end when his fiancée, a nurse, was killed by a bomb which struck her ambulance and later said that he never married because "there was no one else for me... second best is no good for me...I would have liked a wife and family, but it was not to be."
* after the War, set up home at Selsey on the West Sussex coast, a location which enjoys the highest annual total of clear night skies of any in Britain and where he built a home-made reflecting telescope in his garden.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAsuCYLtHUg
A younger Patrick with his telescope :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAsuCYLtHUg
* is a friend of 'Queen' guitarist, and amateur astronomer, Brian May, with whom he co-authored a book called 'Bang! The Complete History of the Universe.'
In his garden with Brian May looking at an eclipse of the Moon :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_YwquBEERaQ
P.S.
Patrick has a television successor and populariser of astronomy in the shape of Professor Brian Cox, who had his 44th birthday yesterday and whose enthusiasm for his subject is equal to Patrick's :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7gEh8XRqPI
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