The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Dundee astronomer set to boldly go into space

BLAST-OFF: Professor booked on Branson spacefligh­t

- STEFAN MORKIS smorkis@thecourier.co.uk

An honorary professor of Dundee University’s Duncan of Jordanston­e Art College is heading for the stars.

Astronomer Nigel Henbest is booked on one of the first flights of Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic programme and will talk about the preparatio­ns he is undergoing for blast-off at the Big Bang event, organised as part of next month’s Wigtown Book Festival.

He said: “I have the ticket, it’s number 245, and hope to make the trip within the next two to three years.

“I have done all the training, including going in a centrifuge that subjected my body to huge G-forces – it was like having a small elephant sitting on my chest.”

Professor Henbest, who has written a host of books on astronomy as well as presenting TV and radio shows on the subject, will also take part in a talk with Heather Couper about space exploratio­n.

The pair will look at how, from at least 40,000 years ago to the present day, humans have probed the mysteries of the night sky.

They will also discuss the often maverick scientists who have helped discover the secrets of space.

Professor Couper, whose father is from the Dundee area, said: “It’s part of our psyche, we have a fascinatio­n with the stars that’s absolutely primal. Looking at the night sky is like staring at an ever-changing and utterly beautiful landscape.

“We’ll also be looking at some of the remarkable characters from the history of astronomy like Tycho Brahe, the 16th Century Dane who studied comets and discovered supernovae but who also had a false nose made of gold after losing the real one in a duel and lived in a castle with a beer-drinking moose.”

They will also discuss the career of Dundonian Thomas Henderson – the first person to measure the distance to Alpha Centauri, the closest star system to our own – and pay tribute to pioneering Scots physicist James Clerk Maxwell, the first Cavendish Professor of Physics at Cambridge University.

 ??  ?? Nigel Henbest and fellow astronomer Heather Couper.
Nigel Henbest and fellow astronomer Heather Couper.

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