Nigel Henbest
Nigel Henbest FRAS is a British astronomer, born in Manchester and educated in Northern Ireland and at Leicester University, where he studied physics, chemistry and astronomy. He did postgraduate research at the University of Cambridge before becoming a freelance science writer. He has written more than 40 books, many in collaboration with Heather Couper, and over 1,000 articles on astronomy and space which have been translated into 27 languages. Previously he has been Astronomy Consultant to New Scientist magazine, editor of the Journal of the British Astronomical Association and media consultant to the Royal Greenwich Observatory. Along with Couper and Stuart Carter, director of the Channel 4 series The Stars, he set up Pioneer Productions where he produced award-winning television programmes and series. Asteroid 3795 Nigel is named after him.
Early life and education
Nigel Henbest was born on 6 May 1951 in West Didsbury, Manchester, where he lived for the first five years of his life. His father, Bernard Henbest, was an organic chemist and his mother, Rosalind a psychiatrist. In 1958, his father was appointed Professor of Organic Chemistry at Queen’s University in Belfast, and Henbest was educated at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution until the age of 18.Henbest graduated from the University of Leicester in 1972, gaining a First Class honours BSc in astrophysics. Here, he met fellow astronomy student Heather Couper; they formed a working partnership - Hencoup Enterprises - that focuses on astronomy popularisation.
Research
Moving to St John’s College, Cambridge, Henbest researched at the Cavendish Laboratory, under the then Astronomer Royal, Sir Martin Ryle. During 1972-73 Henbest made pioneering observations of the remnant of Tycho’s Supernova. Then in 1974 he published the first comprehensive observations of quasars and galaxies made with the newly opened Five Kilometre Telescope, now named the Ryle Telescope.Henbest also researched the optical spectra of quasars at the Royal Greenwich Observatory, before returning to the Department of Geology at Leicester University, to develop and install tiltmeters and a recording seismometer on the active volcano Mount Etna
He has also presented research on ancient astronomical observations to the European Association of Archaeologists
Henbest is now an Honorary Professor in the Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, University of Dundee.
Career
With the publication of his first major book, The Exploding Universe, in 1979 Henbest began a lifelong career as a science communicator - specialising in astronomy and space - across media platforms ranging from magazines and newspapers to radio, television and online.Books and magazines
Henbest has written over 40 books, many written jointly with Heather Couper. Henbest and Couper are ‘unsung heroes of astronomy, great storytellers years ahead of their time and with an eye for a colourful character’As well his contributions to major encyclopedias, Henbest has had over 1,000 articles published in international magazines.
In 1982, Henbest was appointed Astronomy Consultant to New Scientist, a post he held for ten years. He has also been a columnist for BBC Focus magazine and The Independent newspaper.
Plays
In 1989, Lord Bernard and Lady Josephine Miles invited Henbest to write a play for the Molecule Theatre of Science. Co-authored by Mike Bennett, It’s All in the Stars! was staged at the Bloomsbury and Mermaid Theatres in London, and toured nationally.Consultancy and editorships
In 1982, Henbest was appointed Media Consultant to the Royal Greenwich Observatory, with special responsibility for publicising the new Roque de los Muchachos Observatory on La Palma and the opening of the 4.2 m William Herschel Telescope.The Open University invited Henbest to serve as External Assessor on its new Astronomy module, Matter in the Universe, in 1984.
As well as editing books and magazine supplements, Henbest was appointed as Editor of the Journal of the British Astronomical Association in 1985, redesigning and revitalising the publication.
Henbest was Chairman of National Astronomy Week in 1990, which spearheaded the first national campaign against light pollution in the UK.
Eclipses
As guest astronomer, Henbest has led eight expeditions to view total eclipses of the Sun: Sumatra, Hawaii, Aruba, Alderney, Egypt, China, Tahiti and Idaho, USA.
Personal appearances
Henbest has given presentations around the world, from Australia to Colombia and China, as well as on cruise liners including the Queen Mary 2. He has also led tours of major space centres, from the Apollo Mission Control in Houston to the futurist Spaceport America in New Mexico.Online
Henbest presents the regular strand Nigel goes to Space! on the YouTube channel Naked Science.Radio and television appearances
As an astronomy and space expert, Henbest has appeared on BBC Radio 2, Radio 4, Radio 5Live, Radio Scotland, Radio Wales, British Forces Broadcasting Service and many local UK radio stations. For the BBC World Service, he has filed location reports on solar eclipses, the repair of Hubble Space Telescope and spacecraft encounters with planets and comets.He has also been:
- Chairman of The Litmus Test, BBC Radio 4, 1991-93
- Presenter of Seeing Stars, BBC World Service, 1989-2001
- 2000's Greatest Tragedies, National Geographic Channel, 2015
- The 80's Greatest Tragedies, National Geographic Channel, 2014
- Meteor Strike, Fireball from Space, Channel 4, 2013
- UFO Europe Untold Stories, National Geographic Channel
Television production and scriptwriting
In 1983, Henbest conceived a TV documentary on the pioneering Infrared Astronomical Satellite, which was filmed by Quanta production company and screened in the BBC television Horizon strand.Henbest was consultant on the television series The Planets and The Stars, presented by Heather Couper in 1985 and 1988 on Channel 4. With Couper and the director of The Stars series, Stuart Carter, Henbest set up Pioneer Productions later in 1988. Here Henbest wrote and produced TV programmes and series for both British and American broadcasters. They garnered many documentary awards, including four Gold Medals and a Grand Award at the New York Festivals. For Universe: Beyond the Millennium, Henbest won the Glaxo-Wellcome/ABSW Science Writers Award for 1999.
He also delivers presentations on Astronomy and Television at international conferences.
Astronaut
In 2009, Henbest signed up with Virgin Galactic for a suborbital flight into space, launching in SpaceShipTwo from the world’s first purpose-built commercial spaceport Spaceport America.As an ambassador for private human spaceflight, Henbest has appeared in Forbes magazine and presents Nigel Goes to Space! on YouTube
Books
- Space Frontiers, 1978, Woodpecker,
- Exploding Universe, 1979, Marshall Cavendish,
- Spotter's Guide to the Night Sky, 1979, Usborne,
- The Mysterious Universe, 1981, Ebury,
- The Restless Universe, 1982, George Philip,
- The New Astronomy, 1983, Cambridge University Press,
- Astronomy, 1983, Franklin Watts,
- Physics, 1983, Franklin Watts,
- Observing the Universe, 1984, Blackwell/New Scientist, ; hardback paperback
- Comets, Stars and Planets, 1985, Bookthrift,
- The Planets, 1985, Pan,
- Halley's Comet, 1985, New Science Publications,
- The Sun, 1986, Franklin Watts, UK; US
- The Moon, 1986, Franklin Watts, UK; US
- Galaxies and Quasars, 1986, Franklin Watts, UK; US
- Telescopes and Observatories, 1987, Franklin Watts, UK; US
- Spaceprobes and Satellites, 1987, Franklin Watts, UK; US
- The Stars, 1988, Pan,
- The Planets, 1992, Viking,
- The Space Atlas, 1992, Dorling Kindersley,
- The Universe, 1992, Weidenfeld & Nicolson,
- Space Shuttle Discovery, 1993, Channel 4 Books,
- How the Universe Works, 1994, Dorling Kindersley,
- Guide to the Galaxy, 1994, Cambridge University Press,
- The Planets: Portraits of New Worlds, 1994, Penguin,
- Black Holes, 1996, Dorling Kindersley,
- The New Astronomy - completely revised second edition, 1996, Cambridge University Press, hardback; paperback
- Black Holes, 1997, Channel 4 Books,
- Big Bang, 1997, Dorling Kindersley,
- Is Anybody Out There?, 1998, Dorling Kindersley,
- To the Ends of the Universe, 1998, Dorling Kindersley,
- Universe, 1999, Channel 4 Books, hardback; paperback
- Planets, 1999, Ladybird,
- Space Encyclopedia, 1999, Dorling Kindersley,
- Space Hopping: The Planets as You've Never Seen Them Before!, 1999, Egmont,
- Extreme Universe, 2001, Channel 4 Books,
- Mars: The Inside Story of the Red Planet, 2001, Headline,
- Encyclopedia of Space, 2003, Dorling Kindersley,
- The History of Astronomy, 2009, Cassell Illustrated, ; Firefly,
- The Story of Astronomy, 2011, Cassell,
- The Astronomy Bible: The Definitive Guide to the Night Sky and the Universe, 2015, Firefly, ; Philip's,
- The Secret Life of Space, 2015, Aurum,
- Space Visual Encyclopaedia, 2016, Dorling Kindersley,
- 2019 Stargazing, 2018, Philip's,
- The Universe Explained: A Cosmic Q&A, 2018, Firefly,
Contributor
- Illustrated Encyclopedia of Astronomy and Space, 1976, ed. Ian Ridpath, Macmillan
- Encyclopedia of Space Travel and Astronomy, 1979, ed. John Man, Octopus
- Longman New Universal Dictionary, 1982, ed. Paul Procter, Longman
- Encyclopædia Britannica, 1985 Fifteenth Edition, second version,
- How is it Done?, 1990, Reader's Digest
- Images of the Universe, 1991, ed. Carole Stott, Cambridge University Press
- Science Encyclopedia, 1993, Dorling Kindersley
- Astronomy Communication, 2003, edd. André Heck and Claus Madsen, Kluwer
- Communicating Astronomy, 2005, ed. T.J. Mahoney, Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias
- Nothing: From Absolute Zero to Cosmic Oblivion, Amazing Insights into Nothingness, 2013, New Scientist/Profile
- The Reducatarian Solution, 2017, ed. Brian Kateman, TarcherPerigee
Magazines
- Columnist for The Independent newspaper
- BBC Focus magazine
- New Scientist magazine
Television productions
Honours and awards
- DSc University of Leicester
- Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Winner of the Glaxo-Wellcome/ABSW Science Writers Award, 1999.
- Minor planet 3795 Nigel, discovered by Eleanor Helin, is named in his honor.