Astronomer David Lane, who created the world’s first telescope controlled by social media at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax, died late last month following a nine-month battle with brain cancer.
Lane was born in Germany in 1963 before moving to Hebbville, N.S., where he grew up, according to his obituary.
He worked at Saint Mary’s University for 29 years, starting in 1992 as system administrator in the astronomy and physics department and later as the director of the Burke-Gaffney Observatory until his retirement in 2021.
Rob Thacker, a professor in the university’s astronomy and physics department, said Lane wrote the code and developed the robotic infrastructure that allowed the observatory’s telescope to be controlled by anyone in the world through social media.
“That was really, really significant because it got people thinking about what you could do with observatory facilities like this,” Thacker said.
“If you look at Dave’s career, the thing that runs through it was really what we call outreach, this idea of connecting people with the universe. And I think that is an incredibly powerful thing.”
Saint Mary’s University awarded Lane an honorary doctorate in science in 2024 for his contributions to astronomy.
Lane was a member of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, serving as national president for two terms from 2008 to 2013. Lane also received multiple awards from the society.
Lane and RASC member Paul Gray were the first Canadians to discover supernovas from within Canada.
Dave Chapman, another RASC member, met Lane 35 years ago in Halifax.
He said Lane lived, breathed and slept astronomy. When Lane first got the job at the university, he looked like “he had died and gone to heaven,” said Chapman.
Mary Lou Whitehorne, honorary president of the Halifax chapter of the RASC and past president of the national body, said Lane was actively involved in organizing school and community group visits to the observatory, which gave children and adults a chance to experience stargazing and ask questions.
Passion for environmental issues
She said even in the early days of working together they were both concerned about environmental issues and were starting to think of the planet as a life-support system and not just a rock in space.
Lane communicated that philosophy to the young people he encountered, she said.
“He was just one of those really positive people that produced positive repercussions, waves of positive action just sort of emanated out from Dave,” Whitehorne said.
Lane met his wife, Michelle, 25 years ago and they would have celebrated 22 years of marriage this September.
She said they were active members of the St. Margaret Sailing Club in Glen Haven, near their home.
He became a keen and proficient racer, she said, and loved every aspect of sailing. He also had a natural affinity for the weather, tide and winds.
“He had a gift for engaging people in the things that he cared about, whether it was astronomy or sailing, and loved to share his passion for those activities with others,” she said.
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