FEATURE: Brian May on “The Sky At Night” – 4 July 1999

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PART 2

*** Brian the Astronomer ***
“I rushed out and bought all your books, and the music to…”

THE SKY AT NIGHT SUNDAY 4 JULY 1999 11.24 pm 

ANNOUNCER: “Rock input now on BBC1 with Patrick Moore and The Sky At Night.”

Opening music…

The Sky At Night - When the Moon hides the Sun

Recorded space tansmission: 

“…Contact light. Okay engine stopped. We copy you down Eagle.
Houston uh, Tranquillity base here, the Eagle has landed.”

PATRICK MOORE: 30 years ago in July 1969 Apollo 11 landed on the Moon and first Neil Armstrong, then Buzz Aldrin stepped out onto the bleak rocks of the Sea of Tranquillity.

The Sky At Night - Patrick Moore

More of transmission:

“It’s one small step for man. One giant leap for mankind.”

Good evening. I remember that very well. I was in Television Studio 7 doing a commentary as they actually stepped out onto the Moon, and that was a great moment.

And you know, pictures from Apollo are still being released. Here’s one from Apollo 16 taken from a thousand miles in 1972 and here another from Apollo 11 showing part of the lunar surface, about the size of Switzerland. Can you remember here Al Bean showing a container of lunar soil? And by the way, if you want to see these pictures, they’re on show at the Hayward Gallery, Southbank.

The Sky At Night - One small step
One small step
The Sky At Night - The Moon from Apollo 16
The Moon from Apollo 16
Lunar surface from Apollo 11
Lunar surface from Apollo 11
The Sky At Night - Alan Bean
Alan Bean

Well today 30 years later, the Moon’s in the news again for a totally different reason. This time the Moon’s going to act as a screen, blot out the Sun and give us the first English total solar eclipse since 1927 and believe me it’ll be a great sight. And to join me I would like to welcome Brian May.

The Sky At Night - Brian May and Patrick Moore
Brian May and Patrick Moore

Now Brian’s fame as a musician is so great one tends to forget he’s also a highly qualified research astronomer. Welcome to The Sky At Night, Brian.

BRIAN: Thank you very much Patrick. It’s a great privilege to be here.

PATRICK: It’s a lifelong hobby, isn’t it?

BRIAN: Absolutely – a life long passion, for which I think you’re to blame – ‘cos I think I remember seeing the Sky At Night from about 10 years old when I was a kid and I was completely enraptured by your stories of the stars and I rushed out and bought all your books and um, the music too as a matter of fact, (laughs) and I guess I pursued music and astronomy more or less equally. I more or less still do in a way. I still have a passion, although I am an amateur astronomer these days.

The Sky At Night - Brian May

The Sky At Night - Brian May

The Sky At Night - Brian May

The Sky At Night - Brian May

PATRICK: And of course, your main research was in zodiacal dust.

BRIAN: It was – I did a thesis on dust in the solar system and you have an excellent picture of this I know, which is roughly what the zodiacal dust looks like after sunset. It’s very hard to see, isn’t it in fact.

The Sky At Night - Zodiacal Dust
Zodiacal Dust

PATRICK: Well I took that one from La Palma. You don’t really often see it well here, but it’s a nice sight.

The Sky At Night - Patrick Moore

BRIAN: Yes. You need to be in the tropics really. I was in Tenerife not too far away, doing my observations, so if you were in space you’d see that at total eclipse time, wouldn’t you?

The Sky At Night - Brian May

The Sky At Night - Brian May

The Sky At Night - Brian May

PATRICK: Well, dust lit up by the Sun, but now this time the Moon’s going to act as a screen and blot the sun out and you’ve been to quite a few eclipses, haven’t you?

BRIAN: I have indeed, yes. I’ve attempted five and seen four I would say – the one that escaped being Mongolia. We’d drove (laughs) … drove into a snow storm and saw very little actually, but it was still spectacular in its own way.

PATRICK: I’ve been similar, I missed one in Finland. What was your first?

BRIAN: First time, I went really on an impulse to Baja California, in Mexico, and in 1991 saw a really fantastic eclipse and I think I was hooked from that point. I actually attempted pictures at the same time and I think I had beginner’s luck ‘cos I got a couple of quite reasonable pictures.

The Sky At Night - Brian May eclipse photo
Brian May eclipse photo
The Sky At Night - Brian May elipse photo
Brian May eclipse photo

 PATRICK: That’s a beauty.

The Sky At Night - Brian May

The Sky At Night - Brian May

BRIAN: Thee diaond ring effect there, and you can see a little prominence there – very beautiful and of course the solar corona, which was probably something similar to what we might expect in August.

PATRICK: Just about, I would think.

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