Alan Hale, the co-discoverer of Comet Hale-Bopp, passes away at 67
R.I.P.: Amateur astronomer Alan Hale, who co-discovered Comet Hale-Bopp, one of the brightest naked-eye comets in the past century, passed away on June 6, 2026 at his home in New Mexico. He was 67.
One fateful night in 1995, he had just finished observing Comet 71P/Clark and decided to glimpse a few globular clusters in Sagittarius while waiting for Comet 6P/d’Arrest to rise above the horizon. As he focused in on M70, he noticed a faint, diffuse object — a comet that would place his name in astronomical history books alongside Thomas Bopp’s.
Checking his star charts, his email, and the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams (CBAT), Hale fully expected to find that someone else had already discovered the comet he’d spied. On finding all three databases devoid of any mention of a comet near M70, he sent an email to the CBAT team notifying them about his discovery.
At the same time, another amateur astronomer, Thomas Bopp, had spied the fuzzy smudge in his friend’s telescope, while observing from south of Pheonix, Arizona. According to Hale, spotty cell service forced Bopp to drive all the way home to send a telegram to the CBAT team — who were surprised to receive an actual telegram. So Hale’s email arrived first, receiving first billing on the comet, but it’s unclear who observed the comet first.
Comet Hale-Bopp turned out to be the most spectacular comet of the 20th century, easily visible to the naked eye, even in urban areas, and visible for many weeks in the evening sky in the northern hemisphere. All told, it was visible to ordinary people for more than 18 months, a record. Even now, more than a quarter of a century later, no comet has been as bright or as spectacular.
Hale subsequently used this discovery to build a career promoting astronomy to the general public.
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