Daniel du Toit
Quick Facts
Biography
Daniel Stefanus du Toit was a South African astronomer.
Daniel Stefanus du Toit was born in Springfontein, in the Free State, South Africa, on the 15th of December 1917, he was educated at the Sentraal High school Hoërskool Sentraal in Bloemfontein, after school he entered employment at the Boyden Observatory (Harvard College Observatory, Boyden station) at Maselspoort in 1936, and became the chief assistant to the director dr John S. Paraskevopoulos.
He discovered and co-discovered several comets, including 57P/du Toit-Neujmin-Delporte, 66P/du Toit, 79P/du Toit-Hartley. He worked at Boyden Observatory Maselspoort, Free State, South Africa (then administered by Harvard College Observatory, Boyden Station).
All comets were discovered whilst examining photographic plates taken by the Bache or Metcalf telescopes. It was their job to check the photographic plates taken on behalf of Harlow Shapley, then Director at Harvard. The exposures were generally 45 minutes on Cramer High Speed Blue plates, or later Kodak 103a, taken with the 10-inch Metcalf or 8-inch Bache telescopes.
It was during the examination of the exposure for image quality that Daniel du Toit discovered his comets. Daniel du toit and his colleague Michiel Bester discovered several comets, with Michiel Bester ranked first with 6 comets discovered, and Daniel discovering 5 comets and dr J.S. Paraskevopoulos discovering 2 this gives the Boyden Observatory a total of 13 comets discovered.
Daniel du Toit, discovered his five comets between 1941–1945. Curiously, three of Du Toit’s five comets can still be observed today. His first comet is 57P du Toit-Neujmin-Delporte, his second is 66P du Toit, and his third is 79P du Toit-Hartley. The latter has been in the news recently due to the breakup of its nucleus. In 2002 it was discovered that 57P/du Toit–Neujmin–Delporte to have broken up into at least 19 fragments
57P/du Toit–Neujmin–Delporte P/1941 O1 is the designation of a periodic comet. Orbital period: 2,343 days Discovered: July 18, 1941 Last perihelion: May 22, 2015 Next perihelion: October 17, 2021 Epoch: July 25, 2002 Discoverers: Grigory Neujmin, Daniel du Toit, Eugène Joseph Delporte
66P/du Toit 14.71, P/1944 K1 Du Toit discovered this comet on a photograph obtained on 1944 May 16 , 17.04. Discovered: 16 May 1944 He estimated the magnitude as 10.
79P/du Toit-Hartley or du Toit 2 is a periodic comet, now divided into two parts, in the Solar System with an orbital period of 5.06 years. [1] Discovered: 9 April 1945 a Jupiter family comet, expected back 2018 Sept. 13, The dust trail complex of comet 79P/du Toit-Hartley and meteor outbursts at Mars [2] Uncertainties in the calculation of the orbit meant the comet was lost until rediscovered by Malcolm Hartley of the UK Schmidt Telescope Unit, Siding Spring, Australia in 1982, when it was found to have broken into two parts, probably in 1976. Both parts had a brightness of magnitude 17. Observed in 1987, it was missed in 1992 but rediscovered by astronomers at Los Molinos Observatory, Uruguay on 4 March 2003 at magnitude 17. Discoverers: Daniel du Toit, Malcolm Hartley Discovered: on 9 April 1945 with a brightness of apparent magnitude 10.
Michael Bester far left and Daniel du Toit on the far right, courtesy Boyden Observatory
The 1937 team consisted of Dr Paraskevopoulos, Bester, Du Toit, de Villiers and Steyn.
Daniel du Toit left the observatory post war 1946, to pursue a career in the building industry but was forced into early career change by an accident, losing his leg in later years. He died on the 28th of September 1981 at the age of 64 in Bloemfontein, South Africa.