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Bob King is well known in the astronomy society, and we were curious about what first ignited his passion. "Beauty ignited my passion for astronomy," Bob told Bored Panda. "I loved the clouds and stars starting at an early age. I also love hunting for things in the sky, everything from bright planets to distant quasars. Getting to know the inhabitants of our universe is very motivating."
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We also asked what the rarest event that he observed was, and Bob shared something we could only imagine: "the multiple impacts of a shattered comet into Jupiter's atmosphere through my telescope in July 1994. That's when Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 — previously sundered to pieces by Jupiter's gravity — slammed into the planet's atmosphere one fragment after the other. The impacts created a series of dark blotches easily visible in a telescope at the time."
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The astronomer shared what impact this sight had on him, explaining that "watching this happen impressed on me the very real possibility of mass extinction, like what happened 65 million years ago when an asteroid impact here on Earth led to the demise of the dinosaurs. I felt witness to the catastrophic potential of nature."
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We also wanted to know if there was anything great that Bob didn't get to see, but wishes he could've. The astronomer shared with us that there were a couple of solar eclipses that he drove a thousand miles or more to see, but they were ruined because it was cloudy. Well, we can't really bargain with Mother Nature.
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But Bob said he's not too disappointed about those because there's always more to come. Although there were some once-in-a-lifetime events that he'll never have a chance to see, like "the monster Leonid meteor storm in 1966 (clouds!) and getting to see the magnificent comet Ikeya-Seki that same year. I was just getting into astronomy at the time and also very young, so I didn't have good knowledge and the tools and freedom to pursue the comet."
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And, of course, we've hooked you up with an event you should be looking forward to. And it's happening very soon! The astronomer shared that on Dec. 7, something called an occultation will happen — the full moon will cover up the planet Mars. "I can't wait to see the brilliant planet right alongside the moon, watch it disappear and then return to view on the other side of the moon an hour later," shared Bob.
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