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Comet Guy from Down Under
He likely inherited fascination for comets from his grandmother, who spotted
Halley´s comet in two returns. No wonder he dreamed about discovering his own one.
And it happened. Sungrazing comets brought him broad recognition even twice.
Before all else when he was the first amateur to discover new Sungrazing comets
in images from a spacecraft in 1999. Recently he added the ground-based discovery
of another Kreutz comet, C/2011 W3. Comet Guy from Down Under,
Terry Lovejoy.
Comet Guy is your nickname from community website and forum Ice in Space,
dedicated to amateur astronomy in Australia and New Zealand. It is not only
informal name, behind it we found a dedicated astronomer and a real comet
discoverer. Neverthless you have ordinary profession. What is your day time job?
I am IT Infrastructure engineer for an Education Institution. I am responsible
for a small team of IT engineers who provide operational and project support for
the organisation's IT servers and storage (about 600 servers all up).
How did you "discover" astronomy?
I discovered astronomy sometime around mid 1970's when my father showed me the
planets through a 60mm Unitron refractor. I also saw a couple of Solar Eclipses
which help foster my interest. My interest about comets probably stemmed from my
late Grandmother's account of Comet Halley in 1910 (she also saw Halley in 1986).
During the late 1970's it was difficult to get prompt notification of comet's and
it was frustrating to read about Bright comets several months after they had gone.
It wasn't until late 1980 that I was able to spot 2 periodic comets Tuttle and
Stephan-Oterma. I was fascinated by the fact that I could watch them move and
that they were relatively bright compared to most deep sky objects.
Foto: J. Dunphy
As you say you are interested in astronomy since your childhood. Have you ever
thouhgt of being a professional astronomer and to study astronomy?
I have thought about this at times but decided against as I wanted a career where
there was always plentiful opportunities. Additionally, as what I do is a passion
I have always wondered whether the enjoyment would be tempered from work pressures.
Your passion for comets grew stronger after you followed comet Tuttle in winter
1980, which reached almost 7 mag and so it was an easy target for small telescopes.
What kind of telescope did you use for its observation?
It was an 8" F6 reflector on an equatorial mount. I used to use an old 25mm
Unitron Kellner that gave me 50x power and would reach mag 12 comets.
Can you recall your really first attempt to hunt for new comet?
Actually, I didn't seriously search for comets until the SOHO discoveries in 1999.
But I did try some sweeps using an 8"f6 reflector at 50 magnification in the mid
1980's. What I did do is generate some Kreutz comet search charts sometime during
the late 1980's for the now defunct Australian Comet Section. Interest in Kreutz
Sungrazing comets was high at the time due to the spate of discoveries from the
Solwind and Solarmax satellites. It was felt that a brighter object was on the
way because of the appearance of these.
Spacecraft SOHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory) was launched in late
1995 for Sun observation from the space. Nobody could expected that it became
the most successful comet discoverer in history with more than 2100 dicoveries
to date. The new era in cometary search was knocked off by you in summer 1999.
How did you actually learned about SOHO search?
The SOHO search was inspired by the fact that SOHO were publishing images online
from 1996 when C/1996B2 (Hyakutake) passed through the field of view. I started
to search around mid-1999 and quickly found a couple of comets. Suprisingly nobody
outside of
SOHO was looking at the time!
Foto: SOHO
You became a pioneer SOHO comet hunter and during few weeks you have found 4
sungrazing comets (SOHO-74, 75, 80 and 84) as a first amateur in summer 1999.
This inspired many others for hunt, but you after having totally 11 SOHO comets
stopped your quest. Why?
There was increasing competition and I found it hard to get a discovery because
people were submitting claims based on 3 positions or less. This resulted in a
huge number of false alarms, which means a lot of extra work for people and I never
felt comfortable about just submitting a claim. I see these days the discoveries
are regulated by the more experienced SOHO hunters so it appears that there is
now a very good solution in place. Many of these people have volunteered a vast
amount of their spare time and have made a great contribution to cometary science.
Two years earlier, in 1997, you travelled thousands miles to see a bright comet.
Comet Hale-Bopp was one of the brightest comets in the 90´s. Unfortunatelly its
visibility from Australia was rather poor, so you crossed the Pacific Ocean to
observe it under better conditions from the USA. Did this trip meet your expectations?
Yes indeed, I had a great time. Comet Hale-Bopp was an amazing comet, especially
in binoculars, and conspicuous to the naked eye even from the cities.
Was it your only astronomical journey abroad?
Yes. This was such an exceptionally rare event that I could not miss it.
Many astronomers living in the Europe are dreaming about visiting Australia to
see the wonders of the southern skies, which you mae take for granted. Is the
northern sky similarly attractive for you?
There is some envy the other way! Objects such as M51 and M31 sit very low in
Australia and I really enjoyed my view of these objects when they were high overhead.
Also it is a thrill to see Ursa Major and Ursa Minor which are too far north to
be seen well (or seen at all) from Australia.
What places of astronomical interest would you suggest not miss to visitors of
Australia?
I would strongly recommend a visit to one of the astro events (Astrofest,
Lostock for example) to get the chance to view the southern objects from dark
skies through various telescopes. Apart from that Coonabarabran appears to be
a bit of an astronomers paradise with Siding Springs and organised accommodation
catering for amateur astronomers.
You got in touch with CCD technology back in 1994 and later you built your own
cameras for astrophotography. You realized that there is a new powerful tool for
astrophotography and for comet hunt as well, but the right time had not yet come …
I really had to wait for technology to become available at reasonable price.
I felt CCD type technology was necessary for the type of sensitivity needed and
I was unhappy using film because of the number of negatives I would need to process.
One problem with CCD's was even the small format sensors were expensive, and I
just didn't have the funds.
Foto: T.Lovejoy
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You not only recognized the power of DSLR, but also solved the problem with built-in
red and infrared filters. Removing those, the camera became very convenient for
astrophotography. When you described how to modify a camera, many astronomers
started to follow your way. Finally you decided for a modified DSLR camera instead
of classical CCD camera. When was it?
When the Canon 300D was released, finally a large format sensor was available at
a reasonable price. Although colour and uncooled, it showed a lot of promise for
comet hunting.
You live in Thornlands, suburb area of Brisbane. On the list of MPC observatory
codes one can find E27 Thornlands. I think it´s not a coincidence and it is your
observation place. When did you received this code and was it a piece of cake
for you?
Actually I was given the code after making pre-perihelion observations of Comet C/2004 F4 (Bradfield).
It was in April 2004, a month before you started your comet survey program.
You confirmed a comet of legendary Wiliam Bradfield, and hereby you
proved the feasibility of devised technique to yourself. How did you remember
to this ?
It was from pure chance. I got a call from Colin Drescher who was in Hobart at
the time and the comet people were talking about a possible comet
Bill Bradfield that had not been confirmed.
Foto: T. Lovejoy
That night I climbed up onto the top of my roof with a tripod and newly acquired
300D + telephoto lens. Made some stacked images then to my suprise got an image
of the comet! I could not see anything in 15 x 80 binoculars. Luckily we had 3
consecutive clear nights and I secured enough images so that the comet's orbit
could be computed and the comet was announced as C/2004 F4.
I did however intend to perform comet hunting somewhat before this and already
knew the potential based on images I was seeing from amateurs with the Canon 10D.
So you launched your survey and after about 1400 dedicated hours of imaging you
catched your first comet - C/2007 E2 Lovejoy in March 2007. What was your first
thought after you had realized that you finally spotted so much desired icy
wanderer?
I do not keep logs of time spent searching, but it was a lot and 1400 hours was
an estimate. When I came across 2007 E2 I felt “butterflies” inside and it was
difficult to remain composed! My recommendation to anyone is to have a written
plan on what to do when announcing a comet. You really need a second followup
night, before you start contacting others – although in this case the object was
obvious in all images and moving in a consistent uniform motion so I had contacted
a couple of people with just one night of observations.
Foto:
P. Delincak
Only two months had passed and you found your second comet C/2007 K5 on 26. May 2007.
It was almost on 2th anniversary since your survey started. Did you feel the
same as in March?
The excitement was definitely less for 2007 K5 as I was already acclimatised to
the comet discovery process just 2 months earlier. 2011 W3 was however as
exciting as the first since it had been 4 1/2 years since the last discovery!
Two modified digital cameras, Canon 300D and Canon 350D mounted on the tripod
resulted in two comet discovery in 2007. Two years of regularly hunt had passed
since then when you decided for upgrading. What was the reason for it?
It was simply to improve sensitivity by going to a monochrome camera and a faster
optical system. Also with the cooled camera calibration results in cleaner and
smoother images, making object detection easier. One advantage of a colour
camera however is that comets can often be easily recognised by their distinctive
blue/green hue. Also I use a GOTO system which also provides more flexibility
in how I search.
Foto: T. Lovejoy
Your recent setup is a C8 Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope adapted with HyperStar
multiply lens corrector and QHY9 CCD camera. If you compare both setups, how is
it with field of view, limited magnitude and sky coverage ?
Because I now have a GOTO mount I can now move in Declination and Right Ascension,
whereas before I could only move in Right Ascension. With the QHY9 I can reach
the same magnitude with less than a quarter of the exposure I could with the 350D.
Additionally, the Hyperstar is far more sensitive than the 200mm f2.8 lenses.
The net result is probably a magnitude extra reach for the same area covered to
my old setup.
Foto: T. Lovejoy
During one night you capture more than 200 fields images.
How can you catch up with analysing the images in the morning, when you are
supposed to be at work at 9 a.m. ?
I typically kick off the processing images before work, so they are sitting on my
computer to be examined when I get home in the evening.
Back in non-computerized era it required several hours to analyze and measure images.
Nowadays only few clicks on mouse do the same. Although it could not be a matter
of few minutes, can you describe the imaging processing step?
Images are processed using IRIS 5.59 using a batch script that is generated
from the same program that controls the telescope and image acquisition.
Processing includes calibration and registration. I do not astrometrically solve
the image unless there is something in the image. I still manually search the
images which takes at most 60 seconds each. I have yet to find automated detection
software that can exceed or even match the ability for finding comets, although
there are amateurs working on it and I’ll continue to streamline this process.
You had worked hard for almost 2 years with new instrument until you found your third
comet - C/2011 W3. A Hungarian proverb says "Patience brings roses", in your case the reward
was a very special comet a Sungrazer. Although you evaluated it first as a possible
reflection ...
Yes agree, although I think the weather patterns were quite poor the last few years
and there were relatively few comets to discover.
Did you hope in the back of your soul that this comet would behave differently
as most SOHO comets and would survive its approach to the Sun?
Yes, I secretly hoped the comet would survive even though I didn’t believe it would.
Foto: T.Lovejoy
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Have you ever thought that the comet would evolve to such a magnificent shape?
If it were to survive, I thought we just see a faint tail remnant. What we
saw was beyond what I had expected!
You spotted it first on CCD image, then catched it visually in your DOB few days
later, followed its path on SOHO images and after its suprisingly survival you observed
it by naked eyes. Which sight of C/2011 W3 pleased you most?
I wanted to see the comet with my own eyes, so the observation with the Dob
would have satisfied me if the comet had not survived. But because it became
quite spectacular after perihelion there is no doubt the view on December 23 was
the most pleasing.
As Christmas was coming every morning I was looking forward more and more to a
new stunning pictures of the comet ...
Foto:
P. Haese
Foto:
R. Vavra
Foto:
C. Legg
Foto:
A. Cherney
Comet Lovejoy (C/2011 W3) rising
over Western Australia (21-12-2011) from
Colin Legg on Vimeo.
Do you have favourite astronomy related quote?
There is quote from Lewis Swift, one of the famous comet hunters of the 1800's that states
"You can't find comets sleeping in bed". I find it funny that at least 2 comet
discoveries were made while I was actually asleep in bed!
Which comets do you mean?
C/2007 E2 and C/2011 W3C.
Czech amateur astronomers uses expression "7 pearls of astronomy" for most spectacular
astronomical events they wanted to experience. They mean - total solar eclipse,
lunar eclipse, northern lights, transit of Venus, very bright comet, meteor
storm and supernovae explosion. What would be your 7 pearls of astronomy?
Total Solar Eclipse, Bright aurora, Meteor storm , great comet, Moon through good
telescope, Saturn through good telescope and Total Lunar Eclipse in that order!
Are you looking forward to watch the total solar eclipse in Cairns next November?
Yes indeed, I will be in Cairns.
Well, I hope I will see you there ...
Thornlands, Brisbane - Nove Zamky, 2012 Jan 25
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Terry Lovejoy
(*1967) is IT engineer and amateur astronomer.
He is a succesful comet hunter and he holds several precedence in cometary astronomy.
Minor planet (61342) Lovejoy was named after him.
Terry is married and he lives with his wife Sue in Thornlands, Brisbane, Australia.
Discovery story of C/2011 W3
Discovery story of C/2007 K5
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