HomeScienceAstronomers await dazzling celestial show

Astronomers await dazzling celestial show


BBC/Tony Jolliffe Astronomers looking at sky in the Dark Skies Reserve of Bannau Brycheiniog in south Wales
BBC/Tony Jolliffe

Astronomers are poised to catch a star that only shines about once every 80 years

On a cold February night in 1946, a 15-year-old schoolboy made a surprising discovery as he peered out of his bedroom window.

Michael Woodman, a keen amateur astronomer from Newport, had stayed up late
waiting for his father to come home when he noticed something strange in the night sky.

“There was the constellation of Corona Borealis, but in the ring of the Corona, the second star down was bright – very bright,” he explains.

“And I thought ‘I’ve never seen anything like that before.’”


BBC/Tony Jolliffe Michael Woodman
BBC/Tony Jolliffe

Michael Woodman was 15 when he spotted T Cor Bor in 1946

The next morning he wrote to the Astronomer Royal. The now 94-year-old smiles as he recalls the memory, surprised that his teenage self would be so bold.

“And bless me if the Astronomer Royal didn’t reply, with a letter I’ve still got.”

Michael Woodman had witnessed a rare celestial event that briefly dazzled the heavens. Not only that, the Astronomer Royal informed him that he was the first person in the country to have seen this.

He’d spotted a star system, about 3,000 light years away, called T Corona Borealis – or T Cor Bor for short – exploding into brightness, becoming visible in the night sky for a few short days.

“I hit the jackpot,” he says.