NZ Life & Leisure

Over the moon DESPITE LEAVING SCHOOL AT 15, THIS SELF-TAUGHT ASTRONOMER REACHES FOR THE STARS IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE WORDS CARI JOHNSON

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1970s A twinkle in her eye

Jennie McCormick, born in Whanganui, wasn't an overly committed student, far preferring sports and horseback riding to the classroom. At 15, after having moved to a school in Auckland, she saw a job opening for an onsite stablehand. “That was it for school, and off I went to work in a stable with racehorses.” At that stage, astronomy was still but a twinkle in her eye, although she recalls gazing at the stars in the wee hours. “I remember thinking the sky was amazing,” says Jennie. “I wondered what all the stars were and what else could be up there.”

1980s Up, up and away

Astronomy seriously caught Jennie's eye at 29. She was dazzled by stars, planets and galaxies after attending a lecture at the Stardome (formerly Auckland Observator­y). “I was hooked. The more I learned, the more I wanted to know." Additional lectures followed, and she eventually joined the Auckland Astronomic­al Society (AAS), which introduced her to like- minded amateur astronomer­s and academics. Jennie's passion turned profession­al when Stardome offered her a part-time job helping with school group tours. She subsequent­ly launched a small business, AstroKids, to share her enthusiasm for the night sky with schoolchil­dren.

1990s Farm Cove Observator­y

Jennie was offered a full-time role at Stardome in 1998. She spent spare moments observing faint objects through the observator­y's largest telescope. In 1999, with the help of AAS members, she and her partner began building a private domed observator­y in their east Auckland backyard.

Farm Cove Observator­y, convenient­ly located outside her lounge, was completed for less than $ 12,000. “Building the observator­y was the best thing that happened to me. My children were young at the time, so I'd put my telescope on an object and then cook dinner or iron their school uniforms,” says Jennie. Between nights on the telescope and raising her kids, Jennie hosted the Astronomy Hour talkback show, between midnight and 1am, on Newstalk ZB.

2005 Astronomic­al discoverie­s

Jennie considered herself an amateur until, in 2005, she and her 25- centimetre telescope aided in the co- discovery of a planet three times the size of Jupiter. It was the first time an amateur telescope had been involved in such a discovery. Her face was splashed across internatio­nal television networks such as CNN and ABC — but that eminence was just the beginning. The same year, actress Gates McFadden (who played Dr Beverly Crusher on Star Trek: The Next Generation) approached Jennie for an autograph while she was attending a science-fiction expo. “She asked to see the woman with the small telescope who helped discover a planet. Who would ever have thought that was going to happen?” says Jennie. Jennie was awarded the Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit the following year for services to astronomy. After being made redundant from Stardome in 2007, she carried on collecting observatio­nal data for American universiti­es including Harvard, Columbia and Ohio State.

Jennie's days are undeniably longer than most — she makes a living by day and monitors celestial objects by night. She worked at an art gallery before becoming manager of a community facility, using nights to feed her passion with voluntary research. But although astronomic­al data doesn't pay the bills, it sometimes leads to shiny new toys.

“Once Ohio State realized my data could be useful, they asked which telescope I wanted. I went, ‘pardon?' There was a new telescope waiting on my doorstep a few weeks later when I returned home from work.”

2009— now Discoverin­g ‘New Zealand’

In 2009, Jennie made the headlines after discoverin­g an asteroid orbiting between Mars and Jupiter. The asteroid, named “New Zealand”, is only visible through smaller telescopes every seven years. She has since been involved in 22 extrasolar planet co- discoverie­s and, in 2016, she was elected a fellow of the Royal Astronomic­al Society of New Zealand. “Astronomy shows how insignific­ant we are. There's no way we could be the only life forms — it's just a matter of time before we make contact with others. It's amazing to know that I've contribute­d to such a worthwhile science."

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