Gennadiy Borisov
Gennadiy Vladimirovich Borisov is a Crimean telescope maker and amateur astronomer who discovered the first-known interstellar comet, 2I/Borisov, in 2019.
Work
Borisov works as an engineer at the of the Sternberg Astronomical Institute of Moscow State University. There, he maintains the telescopes, but does not make observations himself. He also works with Astronomicheskiy Nauchnyy Tsentr JSC, creating experimental telescopes in collaboration with Roscosmos.| Designation | Type |
| C/2013 N4 | long-period |
| C/2013 V2 | hyperbolic |
| C/2014 R1 | near-parabolic |
| C/2014 Q3 | Halley-type |
| C/2015 D4 | long-period |
| C/2016 R3 | long-period |
| C/2017 E1 | hyperbolic |
| 2I/Borisov | hyperbolic, interstellar |
| C/2019 V1 | near-parabolic |
| C/2020 Q1 | long-period |
| C/2021 L3 | hyperbolic |
| C/2023 T2 | near-parabolic |
| C/2024 V1 | long-period |
Borisov pursues astronomy in his spare time at his personal observatory MARGO located in Nauchnyi, in the southern part of the Crimean peninsula. Between 2013 and 2019, he discovered nine comets and several near-Earth objects such as. These discoveries were made using telescopes he designed and built himself: GENON, GENON Max and the HGB-650 0.65 m telescope. In 2014, Borisov received two Edgar Wilson Awards for his discoveries of C/2013 N4 and C/2013 V2. Borisov also discovered the asteroid 2023 BU, another near-Earth object that passed within 4,000 km of the Earth in January 2023. He also observed cometary activity on NEO (523822) 2012 DG61, making it a Near-Earth Comet. The cometary activity was later independently discovered and confirmed by scientists of the Active Asteroids project.
Discovery of 2I/Borisov
In early 2019, Borisov completed his new 0.65-meter telescope. On August 30, 2019, he used this telescope to discover the first known interstellar comet, 2I/Borisov, which is only the second interstellar object to have been observed.Borisov described his discovery thus:
The discovery of 2I/Borisov by Gennadiy Borisov has been compared to the discovery of Pluto by Clyde Tombaugh. Tombaugh was also an amateur astronomer who was building his own telescopes, although he discovered Pluto using Lowell Observatory's astrograph.