Patrick Moore
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- This article is about the astronomer. For the founder of Greenpeace, see Patrick Moore (environmentalist). For the discoverer of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus, see Patrick S. Moore.
Image:Sir Patrick Moore.jpg Sir Patrick Alfred Caldwell-Moore, CBE, FRS, FRAS (born March 4, 1923) is an amateur astronomer who has attained an important position in British astronomy as a writer, organizer and presenter of the subject. He is a member and former president of the British Astronomical Association, co-founder and former president of the Society for Popular Astronomy, author of over 70 books on astronomy, presenter of the long-running BBC series, The Sky at Night, and a well-known figure on British television. He has a reputation for eccentricity, stemming mainly from his mode of speech, his trademark monocle, and his fondness for the xylophone.
Biography
Moore was born in Pinner, Middlesex, United Kingdom and at an early age moved to Sussex, where he grew up. His youth was marked by poor health, and he was educated at home. Influenced by his mother, he developed an interest in astronomy that persisted into later life and helped to make him a famous and popular personality. During the Second World War, Moore served in the RAF and from 1940 until 1945 was a navigator in RAF Bomber Command, reaching the rank of Flight Lieutenant. The war had a significant influence on his life: his only known relationship ended when his fiancée, a nurse, was killed by a bomb which fell on her ambulance. When later asked why he never married, he answered that "second best is no good for me".
After the war, Moore constructed a home-made reflecting telescope in his garden and began to observe the Moon. He was fascinated by the subject and he is now acknowledged as a specialist in lunar observation, with one of his particular areas of expertise being studying the glimpses of the Moon's far side that are occasionally visible due to the Moon's libration. He was also an early observer of Transient lunar phenomena, short-lived glowing areas on the lunar surface. In 1945, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society. At 10:30 pm on April 26, 1957, in an event that was to be a landmark of his career, Moore presented the first episode of The Sky at Night, a monthly BBC television program for astronomy enthusiasts. Since then, he has appeared on the show every month, with the exception of July 2004 due to a near-fatal bout of food poisoning, making him the world's longest-running television presenter and a well-recognised face on British television.
Moore has done some significant work in the field of astronomy: in 1959, the Soviet Union used his charts of the moon to correlate their first pictures of the far side with his mapped features on the near side and he was involved in the lunar mapping used by the NASA Apollo space missions. In 1965, Moore was appointed Director of the newly-constructed Armagh Planetarium, a post he held until 1968. During the Apollo program, he was one of the major presenters of BBC television's coverage of the moon landing missions. In 1982 asteroid 2602 Moore was named in his honour. He compiled the Caldwell catalogue of astronomical objects.
For a time during the 1970s, he was the Chairman of the anti-immigration United Country Party. He held this position until the party was absorbed by the New Britain Party in 1980. He is also a long-standing opponent of fox hunting.
In 2001, Moore was knighted and was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Society. He also won a BAFTA for his services to television. On 7 March 2006, it was reported that he had been hospitalised with heart problems, followed two days later by the announcement that he had been fitted with a pacemaker.
Other interests and popular culture
Aside from The Sky at Night, a number of other television and radio shows have seen appearances from Moore, including six years, from 1992 until 1998, playing the role of Gamesmaster in the television show of the same name: a character who professed to know everything there is to know about video gaming and sported his trademark monocle. He has also appeared, in often self-parodying roles, on The Goodies, is a regular guest on the radio programme Just a Minute. He was heard in a minor role during the fourth radio series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. He has written more than 70 books, mostly non-fiction dealing with astronomical topics and several science fiction novels. He has also written two operettas. His first novels were a series about the first arrivals on Mars, followed in 1977 by the start of the Scott Saunders Space Adventure series, aimed primarily at a younger audience, which eventually ran to six novels.
Until being forced to give up due to arthritis, Moore was a keen musician and accomplished xylophone player. He sometimes performed novelty turns at the Royal Variety Performance and once appeared in a song-and-dance act in a Morecambe and Wise Christmas spectacular. As a guest on Have I Got News For You, he accompanied the show's closing theme tune on the xylophone and as a pianist, once accompanied Albert Einstein playing The Swan by Camille Saint-Saëns on the violin. He is a long-time friend of Queen guitarist and fellow astronomer Brian May, who is a regular guest on The Sky At Night.
Due to his long-running television career and eccentric habits, distinctively rapid speech delivery and in later years his ever-present monocle, Moore is widely-recognised and well-respected in the United Kingdom, even by those with no interest in astronomy. This was used to great advantage for a 1976 April Fool's joke on BBC Radio 2, when Moore announced that at 9:47 am a once-in-a-lifetime astronomical event was going to occur: Pluto would pass behind Jupiter, temporarily causing a gravitational alignment that would reduce the Earth's own gravity. Moore informed listeners that if they could jump at the exact moment that this event occurred, they would experience a temporary floating sensation. The BBC later received hundreds of phone calls from listeners claiming to have felt the sensation.