June 30, 2025
From campus to cosmos: U荔枝视频 profs Phil Langill and Jeroen Stil get their names written in the stars
Two 荔枝视频 professors have had their names immortalized in space by having asteroids named after them.
Dr. , PhD鈥94, an associate professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy in the Faculty of Science and director of the , was the first to be nominated and have an asteroid named. He then nominated Dr. , PhD, also an associate professor in Physics and Astronomy, to also have an asteroid named.
Jeroen Stil
Riley Brandt, 荔枝视频
鈥淥ne goes about one鈥檚 business and does one鈥檚 job, and then one day a colleague pulls you aside and tells you, 鈥榊ou know what I did? I nominated you for an asteroid and, as of today, it is official,鈥欌 says Stil. 鈥淔or me, it was a complete surprise.鈥
Academics collaborate over exploding stars
The entire process began with David D. Balam, a Canadian astronomer at the University of Victoria who is credited with the discovery, or co-discovery, of more asteroids and minor planets than any Canadian in history, and he gets to name all of his discovered asteroids.
Balam and Langill had collaborated for several years with the at the RAO. The telescope has a wide field of view perfect for searching for asteroids and comets. Langill didn鈥檛 have the time to put together the data analysis tools to use the images the telescope collects to search for asteroids but, with a few tweaks to his own data analysis 鈥榩ipelines鈥 used with the Plaskett telescope, Balam had them ready to go.
Initially, Balam and Langill had been looking for exploding stars in the Andromeda galaxy, which is another function the KGMT is perfect for.
鈥淥n a clear night, I鈥檇 point the telescope at Andromeda, take a handful of images, and transfer the data to him to run through his pipeline of tools,鈥 explains Langill.
Using this method, they were able to co-discover a nova with a research team out of Japan.
After working together for years, Balam decided to name one of his discovered asteroids after Langill.
鈥淚 imagine he thought this crazy guy from U荔枝视频 who is doing all this interesting stuff should have an asteroid named after him,鈥 says Langill.
Who else should have an asteroid named after them?
Following the naming of (740495) Langill, Balam asked if there were any colleagues at the 荔枝视频 who should also have an asteroid named after them.
Phil Langill
Haley Martin, Communications
鈥淚 said, 鈥極h, for sure there are lots,鈥 and the first that came to mind was Jeroen,鈥 recalls Langill.
Not knowing if the nomination would come to fruition and wanting it to be a surprise, Langill kept the process secret from Stil, which became challenging when he had to ask for his birthday to complete the nomination process.
鈥淧hil had asked me for my date of birth, but I had no way to suspect this was what it was for,鈥 says Stil.
Full circle moment is kind of weird and kind of cool
The naming of (611064) Jeroenstil was a full circle moment, as Stil had actually discovered an asteroid during his grad work back in the 1990鈥檚 while taking images of galaxies. However, he couldn鈥檛 claim the discovery because the data couldn鈥檛 confirm the orbit of the asteroid, which is required to confirm the discovery of any asteroid.
Both Langill and Stil acknowledge the large amount of follow-up work that is still required to discover new asteroids. The asteroids need to be studied by multiple people for years to confirm their orbit before they can be officially considered discovered.
鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of weird and kind of cool,鈥 says Stil. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 own an asteroid that鈥檚 named after you and you don鈥檛 have mineral rights, but it does create a strange personal connection to something out there.鈥
Stil says the asteroid is about one kilometre in diameter and will be 270 million kilometres from Earth on its closest approach.
Langill agrees with Stil, adding the asteroid is more of a hypothetical thing that exists due to the technology required to re-image the asteroid.
鈥淲ho knows, in future when people are exploring the solar system in their fancy little spacecrafts, they may use the asteroid as a stepping stone to get to something further away,鈥 says Langill.
鈥淚t might make for a conversation piece or a coffee shop for future astronauts as they make their way through the solar system.鈥