Meanings of minor planet names: 3001–4000
As minor planet discoveries are confirmed, they are given a permanent number by the IAU's Minor Planet Center, and the discoverers can then submit names for them, following the IAU's naming conventions. The list below concerns those minor planets in the specified span of numbers that have received names, and explains the meanings of those names. Besides the Minor Planet Circulars (in which the citations are published), a key source is Lutz D. Schmadel's Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Meanings that do not quote a reference (the "†" links) are tentative.
Name | Provisional Designation | Source of Name |
---|---|---|
3,001–3,500 [] | ||
3001–3100 | ||
3001 Michelangelo | 1982 BC1 | Michelangelo Buonarroti, 15th-16th-century Italian painter and sculptor [MPC 10045] |
3002 Delasalle | 1982 FB3 | Saint Jean-Baptiste de la Salle, 18th-century French founder of the Frères des écoles chrétiennes, in whose schools the discoverer has studied and taught [MPC 15573] |
3003 Konček | 1983 YH | Mikuláš Konček, Slovak meteorologist † |
3004 Knud | 1976 DD | Knud Johan Victor Rasmussen, 19th-20th-century Danish-Eskimo explorer and ethnologist, and close friend of the discoverer's paternal grandfather and namesake [MPC 27124] |
3005 Pervictoralex | 1979 QK2 | Per Victor Alexander Lagerkvist, son of the discoverer † |
3006 Livadia | 1979 SF11 | Livadiya suburb of Yalta † |
3007 Reaves | 1979 UC | Gibson Reaves, American astronomer, historian and educator at the University of Southern California [MPC 9769] |
3008 Nojiri | 1938 WA | Houei (Hoei) Nojiri, 19th-20th-century Japanese essayist, author and astronomer [MPC 9478] |
3009 Coventry | 1973 SM2 | Coventry, England, sister city of Volgograd † |
3010 Ushakov | 1978 SB5 | Fyodor Fyodorovich Ushakov, Russian admiral † ‡ |
3011 Chongqing | 1978 WM14 | Chongqing, China, capital of Ba state in ancient times and the provisional capital of China 1937–1946 [MPC 20834] |
3012 Minsk | 1979 QU9 | Minsk, Byelorussian SSR † |
3013 Dobrovoleva | 1979 SD7 | Oleg Vasilyevich Dobrovolsky, Soviet astronomer † |
3014 Huangsushu | 1979 TM | Su-Shu Huang, Chinese-American astrophysicist † |
3015 Candy | 1980 VN | Michael P. Candy, Australian astrometrist † |
3016 Meuse | 1981 EK | The Meuse River (Dutch Maas), which rises in France and flows through Belgium and the Netherlands † |
3017 Petrovič | 1981 UL | Štefan Petrovič, Slovak climatologist † |
3018 Godiva | 1982 KM | Lady Godiva, legendary 10th-11th-century Anglo-Saxon wife of Leofric, Earl of Mercia [MPC 9770] |
3019 Kulin | 1940 AC | György Kulin, Hungarian astronomer † ‡ |
3020 Naudts | 1949 PR | Ignace Naudts, Belgian amateur astronomer [MPC 21955] |
3021 Lucubratio | 1967 CB | Latin for "nocturnal study, night work" (from lucubrum, candle) [MPC 21129] |
3022 Dobermann | 1980 SH | Karl Friedrich Louis Dobermann, German amateur astronomer and dog breeder † ‡ + |
3023 Heard | 1981 JS | John Frederick Heard, Canadian astronomer † |
3024 Hainan | 1981 UW9 | Hainan Province † |
3025 Higson | 1982 QR | Roger Higson, American astronomer assistant † |
3026 Sarastro | 1977 TA1 | Sarastro, high priest of the Temple of Wisdom in Mozart's The Magic Flute [MPC 21130] |
3027 Shavarsh | 1978 PQ2 | Shavarsh Karapetyan, Soviet Armenian finswimmer 11-time World Record holder, 17-time World Champion, 13-time European Champion and 7-time USSR Champion; additionally, he saved 20 lives when a trolleybus fell into the Yerevan reservoir. † |
3028 Zhangguoxi | 1978 TA2 | Zhang Guoxi, Chinese industrialist † |
3029 Sanders | 1981 EA8 | Jeffrey D. Sanders, American student † |
3030 Vehrenberg | 1981 EH16 | Hans Vehrenberg, German amateur astronomer, author of the Atlas of Deep-Sky Splendors (Mein Messier-Buch) † ‡ |
3031 Houston | 1984 CX | Walter Scott Houston, American amateur astronomer well known for his column Deep Sky Wonders in "Sky & Telescope" [MPC 10845] |
3032 Evans | 1984 CA1 | Reverend Robert O. Evans, Australian amateur astronomer, discoverer of several extragalactic supernovae [MPC 10845] |
3033 Holbaek | 1984 EJ | Holbæk, Denmark, town nearest to the discovery site (Brorfelde Observatoriet) on the occasion of the former's 700th anniversary in 1986 [MPC 10045] |
3034 Climenhaga | A917 SE | John L. Climenhaga, Canadian astronomer † |
3035 Chambers | A924 EJ | John Eric Chambers, then British predoctoral fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics [MPC 22497] |
3036 Krat | 1937 TO | Vladimir Alekseevich Krat, Russian astronomer † |
3037 Alku | 1944 BA | Finnish for "Beginning", the discoverer's boyhood boat, built by his father [MPC 18450] |
3038 Bernes | 1978 QB3 | Mark Naumovich Bernes, Soviet film actor and singer † |
3039 Yangel | 1978 SP2 | Mikhail Kuz'mich Yangel', 20th-century Soviet rocket and missile designer [MPC 10547] † ‡ |
3040 Kozai | 1979 BA | Yoshihide Kozai, Japanese astronomer and celestial mechanician, discoverer of the Kozai mechanism [MPC 9770] |
3041 Webb | 1980 GD | Rev. Thomas William Webb, 19th-century British amateur astronomer, author of Celestial Objects for Common Telescopes and discoverer of S Orionis [MPC 9770] |
3042 Zelinsky | 1981 EF10 | David S. Zelinsky, American mathematician, formerly active participant in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey while an undergraduate student at Caltech [MPC 13173] |
3043 San Diego | 1982 SA | San Diego, California, in recognition of its efforts to curb light pollution [MPC 8914] |
3044 Saltykov | 1983 RE3 | Nikita Saltykov, the first discoverer's grandfather [MPC 22245] |
3045 Alois | 1984 AW | Alois T. Stuczynski, the discoverer's grandfather [MPC 9479] |
3046 Molière | 4120 P-L | Molière, 17th-century French playwright [MPC 10045] |
3047 Goethe | 6091 P-L | Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 18th-19th-century German poet and playwright [MPC 10045] |
3048 Guangzhou | 1964 TH1 | Guangzhou, largest open city in southern China and the capital of Guangdong province [MPC 15089] |
3049 Kuzbass | 1968 FH | Kuznets Basin, an industrial region (Kemerovo Region) of Siberia, known for its coalmining (it is one of the richest coal deposits in the world) [MPC 13173] |
3050 Carrera | 1972 NW | The Carreras (Javiera, Juan José, José Miguel, and Luis), 18th-19th-century key figures of the Chilean War of Independence [MPC 10547] |
3051 Nantong | 1974 YP | Nantong, China [MPC 20835] |
3052 Herzen | 1976 YJ3 | Aleksandr Ivanovich Herzen, 19th-century Russian revolutionary, writer, and philosopher, "father of Russian socialism" and founder of the free Russian press abroad [MPC 11159] |
3053 Dresden | 1977 QS | Dresden, Germany (then in the GDR) [MPC 9770] |
3054 Strugatskia | 1977 RE7 | Boris and Arkady Strugatsky, Russian science fiction writers † |
3055 Annapavlova | 1978 TR3 | Anna Pavlova, Russian ballet dancer † |
3056 INAG | 1978 VD1 | French Institut national d'astronomie et de géophysique (National Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics), which built the discovery telescope † |
3057 Mälaren | 1981 EG | Lake Mälaren, Sweden † |
3058 Delmary | 1981 EO17 | Delmary Rose Schanz, 20th-century American artist † |
3059 Pryor | 1981 EF23 | Carlton P. Pryor, American astronomer, who participated in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey while an undergraduate student at Caltech [MPC 13173] |
3060 Delcano | 1982 RD1 | Juan Sebastian del Caño, 15th-16th-century Spanish navigator, lieutenant of Magellan, first to continuously circumnavigate the globe † |
3061 Cook | 1982 UB1 | James Cook, 18th-century British navigator † |
3062 Wren | 1982 XC | Sir Christopher Wren, 17th-18th-century British architect and astronomer † |
3063 Makhaon | 1983 PV | Makhaon, mythical physician to Greeks during the Trojan War † |
3064 Zimmer | 1984 BB1 | Louis Zimmer, Belgian (Flemish) clockmaker and amateur astronomer † |
3065 Sarahill | 1984 CV | Sarah J. Hill, American astronomer † |
3066 McFadden | 1984 EO | Lucy-Ann McFadden, American planetary scientist † |
3067 Akhmatova | 1982 TE2 | Anna Akhmatova, 20th-century Soviet poet † |
3068 Khanina | 1982 YJ1 | Frida Borisovna Khanina, Soviet orbit computer † |
3069 Heyrovský | 1982 UG2 | Jaroslav Heyrovský, Czech physical chemist † |
3070 Aitken | 1949 GK | Robert Grant Aitken, 19th-20th-century American astronomer, fourth director of the Lick Observatory, author of the "New General Catalogue of Double Stars within 12° of the North Pole" (1932) [MPC 14481] |
3071 Nesterov | 1973 FT1 | Pyotr Nesterov, 19th-20th-century Russian pioneer airman † |
3072 Vilnius | 1978 RS1 | Vilnius, Lithuania † |
3073 Kursk | 1979 SW11 | Kursk, Russia † |
3074 Popov | 1979 YE9 | Alexander Stepanovich Popov, 19th-century Russian radio inventor † |
3075 Bornmann | 1981 EY15 | Patricia L. Bornmann, American solar astronomer, who participated in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey while an undergraduate student at Caltech [MPC 13174] |
3076 Garber | 1982 RB1 | Paul E. Garber, 20th-century American historian † |
3077 Henderson | 1982 SK | Thomas James Henderson, 19th-century Scottish astronomer, first Astronomer Royal for Scotland, first to measure the distance to a star, Alpha Centauri, in 1839 [MPC 10846] |
3078 Horrocks | 1984 FG | Jeremiah Horrocks, 17th-century English astronomer and mathematician, who predicted the transit of Venus across the face of the sun in November 1639 and became the first to see such an event; he also believed the Moon to have an elliptical orbit with the earth at one focus, a fact that Newton was later to acknowledge [MPC 10846] |
3079 Schiller | 2578 P-L | Friedrich Schiller, 18th-century German playwright [MPC 10045] |
3080 Moisseiev | 1935 TE | Nikolai Dmitrevich Moiseiev (Moisseev), 20th-century Soviet astronomer † |
3081 Martinůboh | 1971 UP | Bohuslav Martinů, Czech composer [MPC 31609] |
3082 Dzhalil | 1972 KE | Musa Mustafovich Dzhalil' (Musa Cälil), 20th-century Tatar Soviet poet † |
3083 OAFA | 1974 MH | Observatorio Astronómico Félix Aguilar [MPC 19333] |
3084 Kondratyuk | 1977 QB1 | Yuri Kondratyuk, 20th-century Soviet cosmonautics pioneer † |
3085 Donna | 1980 DA | Donna Marie Thompson, American administrative assistant for the Minor Planet Center and the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams, secretary for the Planetary Sciences division of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics [MPC 16244] |
3086 Kalbaugh | 1980 XE | Carroll Kalbaugh Liller, father of Chilean astronomer William Liller [MPC 10548] |
3087 Beatrice Tinsley | 1981 QJ1 | Beatrice Muriel Tinsley, née Hill, 20th-century British-born New Zealand astronomer [MPC 9479] |
3088 Jinxiuzhonghua | 1981 UX9 | "Splendid China", park at Shenzhen, the largest miniature scenic spot in the world [MPC 17221] |
3089 Oujianquan | 1981 XK2 | Ou Jianquan, Chinese entrepreneur, for his notable contributions in developing township enterprises [MPC 22497] |
3090 Tjossem | 1982 AN | The Tjossem family of central Washington State, four generations of whose members have been friends of the discoverer and his family (in particular Peter Tjossem, 19th-20th-century amateur entomologist and paleobotanist) [MPC 10045] |
3091 van den Heuvel | 6081 P-L | Edward Peter Jacobus van den Heuvel, Dutch astronomer, and his niece Julia Edith van den Heuvel [MPC 11159] † |
3092 Herodotus | 6550 P-L | Herodotus, 5th-century B.C. Greek historian, "Father of Historiography" [MPC 11159] |
3093 Bergholz | 1971 MG | Olga Fedorovna Bergholz, 20th-century Russian poet † ‡ |
3094 Chukokkala | 1979 FE2 | Korney Chukovsky, pen name of Nikolaj Vasil'evich Kornejchukov, 18th-19th-century Russian writer, scholar, and poet ("Chukokkala" is the title of an album by him) † |
3095 Omarkhayyam | 1980 RT2 | Omar Khayyám, 11th-12th-century Tajik-Persian poet, mathematician and philosopher † |
3096 Bezruč | 1981 QC1 | Petr Bezruč, Czech poet † |
3097 Tacitus | 2011 P-L | Tacitus, 1st-century Roman historian [MPC 11159] |
3098 van Sprang | 4579 P-L | Bert van Sprang, Dutch meteor specialist † |
3099 Hergenrother | 1940 GF | Carl W. Hergenrother, American astronomer [MPC 27124] |
3100 Zimmerman | 1977 EQ1 | Nikolaj Vladimirovich Zimmerman, Russian astronomer † |
3101–3200 | ||
3101 Goldberger | 1978 GB | Marvin L. Goldberger, American physicist, teacher and humanitarian, president of the California Institute of Technology, to commemorate his birthday, October 22 [MPC 9217] |
3102 Krok | 1981 QA | Krok, mythical Slavonic prince † |
3103 Eger | 1982 BB | Eger a small town NE of Budapest, at one time the sixth largest town in Hungary, known for its medieval streets, castle, and red wine (Bull's Blood) † |
3104 Dürer | 1982 BB1 | Albrecht Dürer, 15th-16th-century German master painter, woodcutter, engraver, and scholar [MPC 9217] |
3105 Stumpff | A907 PB | Karl Stumpff, 20th-century German celestial mechanician and professor of astronomy, pioneer of Fast Fourier Analysis, author of the three-volume Himmelsmechanik [MPC 22497] |
3106 Morabito | 1981 EE | Linda Morabito (afterwards Linda Kelly), Education Programs Manager at the Planetary Society † |
3107 Weaver | 1981 JG2 | Kenneth F. Weaver, American senior assistant editor for science of the National Geographic magazine [MPC 10311] |
3108 Lyubov | 1972 QM | Lyubov Petrovna Orlova, 20th-century Soviet actress † |
3109 Machin | 1974 DC | Arnold Machin, 20th-century British sculptor [MPC 34618] |
3110 Wagman | 1975 SC | Nicholas E. Wagman, 20th-century American astronomer and astrometrist † |
3111 Misuzu | 1977 DX8 | Nickname of Shinano Province, now Nagano Prefecture, Japan, the discovery site [MPC 11441] |
3112 Velimir | 1977 QC5 | Velimir (Viktor Vladimirovitch) Khlebnikov, 19th-20th-century Russian poet † |
3113 Chizhevskij | 1978 RO | Aleksandr Leonidovich Chizhevskij, 20th-century Soviet biologist, one of the founders of heliobiology † |
3114 Ercilla | 1980 FB12 | Don Alonso de Ercilla y Zúñiga, 16th-century Spanish poet and soldier, who distinguished himself in the campaign in Chile against the Araucanians, inspiration for the epic poem La Araucana [MPC 11160] |
3115 Baily | 1981 PL | Francis Baily, 18th-19th-century English astronomer, one of the founders of the Royal Astronomical Society, and namesake of Baily's beads [MPC 11160] |
3116 Goodricke | 1983 CF | John Goodricke, 18th-century Dutch-English deaf-mute astronomer, who identified Algol as an eclipsing variable and discovered δ Cephei [MPC 10847] † |
3117 Niepce | 1983 CM1 | Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, 18th-19th-century French photography pioneer [MPC 10548] |
3118 Claytonsmith | 1974 OD | Clayton Albert Smith, 20th-century American astrometrist, director of the Yale-Columbia Southern Observatory and later the United States Naval Observatory's astrometry department † [1] |
3119 Dobronravin | 1972 YX | Petr Pavlovich Dobronravin, 20th-century Russian astrophysicist and spectroscopist, deputy director of the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory 1952–1969 † ‡ |
3120 Dangrania | 1979 RZ | Daniil Aleksandrovich Granin, 20th-century Russian writer † ‡ |
3121 Tamines | 1981 EV | Tamines, Belgium, now called (Sambreville) [MPC 19333] |
3122 Florence | 1981 ET3 | Florence Nightingale, English nurse and hospital reformer [MPC 21955] |
3123 Dunham | 1981 QF2 | David Waring Dunham, American astronomer, organizer of the International Occultation Timing Association [MPC 10847] |
3124 Kansas | 1981 VB | Kansas, United States, the discoverer's home state, and also the University of Kansas, the discoverer's alma mater, to commemorate the centennial of observational astronomy there, which began with the purchase of an Alvan Clark 6-inch refractor in 1885 [MPC 10045] |
3125 Hay | 1982 BJ1 | William Thompson Hay, 19th–20th-century British music-hall comedian, film star of the 1930s and early 1940s, and amateur astronomer, (re)discoverer of Saturn's Great White Spot in 1933 [MPC 10847] |
3126 Davydov | 1969 TP1 | Denis Vasil'evich Davydov, 18th–19th-century Russian officer, writer and poet, hero of the Patriotic War of 1812 [MPC 11160] |
3127 Bagration | 1973 ST4 | Petr Ivanovich Bagration, 18th–19th-century Russian (of Georgian descent) general, hero of the Patriotic War of 1812 who died at the Battle of Borodino [MPC 11160] |
3128 Obruchev | 1979 FJ2 | Vladimir Afanasjevich Obruchev, 19th–20th-century Russian geologist, geographer, and author of popular books on science and science-fiction novels [MPC 12013] |
3129 Bonestell | 1979 MK2 | Chesley Bonestell, American space artist. Named following a competition organized by the Planetary Society † |
3130 Hillary | 1981 YO | Sir Edmund Hillary, British mountaineer † |
3131 Mason-Dixon | 1982 BM1 | Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, 18th-century British astronomers who observed the 1761 transit of Venus from the Cape of Good Hope, and later (1763–1767) surveyed the boundary between Pennsylvania and Maryland, the Mason–Dixon line [MPC 10847] |
3132 Landgraf | 1940 WL | Werner Landgraf, German astronomer, who established the orbit (and whose initials appear in the provisional designation) † |
3133 Sendai | A907 TC | Sendai, Japan, the "Heidelberg of the East" (this object was discovered from Heidelberg) and the Sendai Municipal Astronomical Observatory [MPC 10045] |
3134 Kostinsky | A921 VA | Sergej Konstantinovich Kostinskij, 19th-20th-century Russian astronomer, after whom the Kostinsky effect is named [MPC 10548] † |
3135 Lauer | 1981 EC9 | Tod R. Lauer, American astronomer, who participated in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey while an undergraduate student at Caltech [MPC 13174] |
3136 Anshan | 1981 WD4 | Anshan, China [MPC 21607] |
3137 Horky | 1982 SM1 | Czech hill, site of Antonín Mrkos' first telescope † |
3138 Ciney | 1980 KL | Ciney, Belgium, chief town of the Condroz, where the discoverer maintains a residence [MPC 15573] |
3139 Shantou | 1980 VL1 | Shantou, China [MPC 16244] |
3140 Stellafane | 1983 AO | Stellafane, the annual Vermont star party organized by the Springfield Telescope Makers [MPC 13174] |
3141 Buchar | 1984 RH | Emil Buchar, Czech astronomer † |
3142 Kilopi | 1937 AC | kilo pi (1000*π, rounds off to 3142) [MPC 9771] |
3143 Genecampbell | 1980 UA | I. Gene Campbell, American systems programmer in the central computing facility at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics [MPC 16244] |
3144 Brosche | 1931 TY1 | Peter Brosche, 20th-century German astronomer [MPC 22497] |
3145 Walter Adams | 1955 RY | Walter Sydney Adams, 19th-20th-century American astronomer, director of the Mount Wilson Observatory (1923–1946), whose spectroscopic studies led to the discovery, with Ernst Arnold Kohlschütter, of the spectroscopic method for determining parallax, and who identified Sirius B as the first white-dwarf star known [MPC 15089] |
3146 Dato | 1972 KG | Dato Kratsashvili (1963–1980), a young Georgian painter [MPC 13174] † |
3147 Samantha | 1976 YU3 | Samantha Reed Smith, 20th-century American schoolgirl who became "America's Youngest Ambassador" [MPC 11160] † |
3148 Grechko | 1979 SA12 | Georgii Mikhailovich Grechko, Soviet cosmonaut and scientist [MPC 12971] † |
3149 Okudzhava | 1981 SH | Bulat Okudzhava, Russian (of Georgian descent) writer, poet and songwriter [MPC 12209] † ‡ |
3150 Tosa | 1983 CB | Tosa Province (Ancient name of Kōchi Prefecture), Japan, the discoverer's place of residence [MPC 10847] |
3151 Talbot | 1983 HF | William Henry Fox Talbot, British pioneer of photography* |
3152 Jones | 1983 LF | Albert F. A. L. Jones, New Zealand astronomer [Schmadel] |
3153 Lincoln | 1984 SH3 | Abraham Lincoln, American president* |
3154 Grant | 1984 SO3 | Ulysses S. Grant, American president* |
3155 Lee | 1984 SP3 | Robert E. Lee, American general* |
3156 Ellington | 1953 EE | Duke Ellington, American musician* |
3157 Novikov | 1973 SX3 | Alexei Ivanovich Novikov, Soviet aviator and poet † |
3158 Anga | 1976 SU2 | Siberian village, birthplace of Russian etnographers Ivan Evseevich Venyaminov and Afanasij Prokopevich Shchapov † |
3159 Prokof'ev | 1976 US2 | Vladimir Konstantinovich Prokof'ev, Russian spectroscopist † |
3160 Angerhofer | 1980 LE | Phillip Edward Angerhofer, American astronomer and astrophysicist* |
3161 Beadell | 1980 TB5 | Len Beadell, Australian surveyor [Schmadel] |
3162 Nostalgia | 1980 YH | named in remembrance of good things that are no more † |
3163 Randi | 1981 QM | James Randi, magician † |
3164 Prast | 6562 P-L | Martin Prast, American citizen and war veteran [Schmadel] † |
3165 Mikawa | 1984 QE | Mikawa Province (Ancient name of eastern half of Aichi Prefecture), Japan |
3166 Klondike | 1940 FG | The brothers Karl F. Joutsen and Anton F. Johnson, who made a fortune in the Klondike Gold Rush † |
3167 Babcock | 1955 RS | Horace W. Babcock and his father Harold D. Babcock, American astronomers [Schmadel] |
3168 Lomnický Štít | 1980 XM | Lomnický Štít, Czech meteorological and solar observatory † |
3169 Ostro | 1981 LA | Steven Jeffrey Ostro, American astronomer |
3170 Dzhanibekov | 1979 SS11 | Vladimir Dzhanibekov, Soviet cosmonaut † |
3171 Wangshouguan | 1979 WO | Shou-Guan Wang, Chinese astronomer* |
3172 Hirst | 1981 WW | William Parkinson Hirst, South African astronomer |
3173 McNaught | 1981 WY | Robert McNaught, British astronomer* |
3174 Alcock | 1984 UV | George Alcock, British comet and nova hunter |
3175 Netto | 1979 YP | Edgar Rangel Netto, Brazilian astronomer* |
3176 Paolicchi | 1980 VR1 | Paolo Paolicchi, Italian astrophysicist |
3177 Chillicothe | 1934 AK | Chillicothe, Ohio [Schmadel]. (There are places of the same name in Missouri and Illinois)* |
3178 Yoshitsune | 1984 WA | Minamoto no Yoshitsune, early samurai |
3179 Beruti | 1962 FA | Colonel Antonio Luis Beruti, Argentinian military officer and patriotic leader in the struggles for independence from Spanish rule |
3180 Morgan | 1962 RO | William Wilson Morgan, American astronomer [MPC 15089] |
3181 Ahnert | 1964 EC | Paul Oswald Ahnert, German astronomer, author of the annual Kalender fur Sternfreunde [MPC 9771] |
3182 Shimanto | 1984 WC | Shimanto River, longest river of the discoverer's home prefecture of Kochi, Japan [MPC 10848] |
3183 Franzkaiser | 1949 PP | Franz Kaiser German astronomer † |
3184 Raab | 1949 QC | Herbert Raab, Austrian software engineer and amateur astronomer, author of Astrometrica software † ‡ |
3185 Clintford | 1953 VY1 | Clinton B. Ford, American amateur astronomer, at one time secretary of the American Association of Variable Star Observers, co-founder of what is now called the Ford Observatory in southern California, and 1987 recipient of the Amateur Achievement Award of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific [MPC 15260] |
3186 Manuilova | 1973 SD3 | Olga Maksimilianovna Manuilova, Soviet sculptor † |
3187 Dalian | 1977 TO3 | Dalian, China [MPC 22497] |
3188 Jekabsons | 1978 OM | Peter Jekabsons, 20th-century Australian observer and astronomical painter, whose paintings adorn the walls of the Perth Observatory, the discovery site [MPC 18644] |
3189 Penza | 1978 RF6 | Penza, Russia † |
3190 Aposhanskij | 1978 SR6 | Vladimir Mikhailovich Aposhanskij, 20th-century Soviet poet and journalist [MPC 11160] |
3191 Svanetia | 1979 SX9 | Svanetia, a mountainous district in Georgia [MPC 12971] |
3192 A'Hearn | 1982 BY1 | Michael Francis A'Hearn, American astronomer † ‡ |
3193 Elliot | 1982 DJ | James L. Elliot, American professor of physics and astronomy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and co-discoverer of the Uranian rings [MPC 10848] |
3194 Dorsey | 1982 KD1 | Dorsey Taylor Shoemaker, Jr., American businessman and uncle of the second discoverer [MPC 10311] |
3195 Fedchenko | 1978 PT2 | The 19th-20th-century Fedchenko Russian family: Alexei Pavlovich Fedchenko, naturalist, geographer, and explorer, his wife Ol'ga Aleksandrovna Fedchenko, botanist and plant collector, and their son Boris Alekseevich Fedchenko, botanist, geographer, writer, co-initiator and contributor to the multi-volume "Flora of the U.S.S.R." [MPC 12971] |
3196 Maklaj | 1978 RY | Nicholai Miklukho-Maklai, Russian ethnologist † |
3197 Weissman | 1981 AD | Paul Robert Weissman, American cometary physicist [MPC 11160] |
3198 Wallonia | 1981 YH1 | Wallonia (Walloon Region), one of the three federal regions of Belgium, the discoverer's birthplace and location of the Institut d'astrophysique (the discovery site operator) [MPC 10848] |
3199 Nefertiti | 1982 RA | Nefertiti, Egyptian queen [MPC 10311] |
3200 Phaethon | 1983 TB | Phaëton, mythological son of Helios, who operated the solar chariot for a day, lost control of it and almost set fire to the Earth (the object, associated with the Geminid meteor stream, had then the smallest known perihelion distance) [MPC 9771] |
3201–3300 | ||
3201 Sijthoff | 6560 P-L | Albert Georg Sijthoff, a Dutch publisher whose family backed the construction of the Sijthoff Planetarium in The Hague in 1934.† |
3202 Graff | A908 AA | Gareth (Graff) Vaughan Williams, British astronomer*[2] |
3203 Huth | 1938 SL | Hans Huth, German astronomer* |
3204 Lindgren | 1978 RH | Astrid Anna Emilia Lindgren, Swedish writer † |
3205 Boksenberg | 1979 MO6 | Alexander Boksenberg, British astronomer* |
3206 Wuhan | 1980 VN1 | Wuhan, China |
3207 Spinrad | 1981 EY25 | Hyron Spinrad, American astronomer* |
3208 Lunn | 1981 JM | Borge Lunn, Danish civil engineer and metallurgist [Schmadel] |
3209 Buchwald | 1982 BL1 | Vagn Fabritius Buchwald, Danish meteoriticist* |
3210 Lupishko | 1983 WH1 | Dmitrii Lupishko, Ukrainian astronomer* |
3211 Louispharailda | 1931 CE | Louis Pierre Van Biesbroeck, and Pharailda de Colpaert Van Biesbroeck, parents of the discoverer [Schmadel] |
3212 Agricola | 1938 DH2 | Georg Agricola, German scientist, "father of mineralogy"* |
3213 Smolensk | 1977 NQ | Smolensk, Russia † |
3214 Makarenko | 1978 TZ6 | Anton Makarenko, Soviet teacher and writer † |
3215 Lapko | 1980 BQ | Konstantin Kuz'mich Lapko, Soviet surgeon † |
3216 Harrington | 1980 RB | Robert Sutton Harrington, American astronomer † [1] |
3217 Seidelmann | 1980 RK | Paul Kenneth Seidelmann, American astronomer [1] |
3218 Delphine | 6611 P-L | Delphine Jehoulet Delsemme, wife of American astronomer Armand Delsemme of Toledo, Ohio [Schmadel] |
3219 Komaki | 1934 CX | Kōjirō Komaki, Japanese amateur astronomer |
3220 Murayama | 1951 WF | Sadao Murayama, Japanese astronomer |
3221 Changshi | 1981 XF2 | Changshu, China |
3222 Liller | 1983 NJ | William Liller, American astronomer † |
3223 Forsius | 1942 RN | Sigfrid Aronus Forsius (also known as Siegfried Aronsen), Finnish-born Professor of Astronomy in Uppsala, Sweden. His 1611 manuscript propounding his theory of colours was discovered in the Royal Library in Stockholm in 1969* |
3224 Irkutsk | 1977 RL6 | Irkutsk, Russia |
3225 Hoag | 1982 QQ | Arthur Allen Hoag, American astronomer [1] |
3226 Plinius | 6565 P-L | Pliny the Elder (or Pliny the Younger)* |
3227 Hasegawa | 1928 DF | Ichirō Hasegawa, Japanese astronomer* |
3228 Pire | 1935 CL | Georges Pire (Father Dominique), Belgian monk (Dominican Order), winner of the 1958 Nobel Prize for Peace* |
3229 Solnhofen | A916 PC | Solnhofen, south (SSE) of Nuremberg in Germany and known for its limestone and fossils* |
3230 Vampilov | 1972 LE | Aleksandr Valentinovich Vampilov, Soviet playwright † |
3231 Mila | 1972 RU2 | Lyudmila Pakhomova, Soviet ice dancer † |
3232 Brest | 1974 SL | Brest, a city in Belarus † |
3233 Krišbarons | 1977 RA6 | Krišjānis Barons, Latvian folklorist † |
3234 Hergiani | 1978 QO2 | Mikhail Vissarionovich Hergiani, famous Soviet mountaineer † |
3235 Melchior | 1981 EL1 | Paul Jacques Léon Melchior, Belgian geophysicist* |
3236 Strand | 1982 BH1 | Kaj Aage Gunnar Strand, Danish and American astronomer [Schmadel] [1] |
3237 Victorplatt | 1984 SA5 | Victor Platt, British actor* |
3238 Timresovia | 1975 VB9 | Nikolay Timofeeff-Ressovsky, Soviet biologist † |
3239 Meizhou | 1978 UJ2 | Meizhou, China |
3240 Laocoon | 1978 VG6 | Laocoön, Trojan priest of Poseidon |
3241 Yeshuhua | 1978 WH14 | Ye Shuhua, Chinese astronomer |
3242 Bakhchisaraj | 1979 SG9 | Bakhchisaray, a town in Crimea, the center of the same district where Crimean Astrophysical Observatory was created † |
3243 Skytel | 1980 DC | named after Sky and Telescope magazine for its 50th anniv.† |
3244 Petronius | 4008 P-L | Petronius, Roman writer |
3245 Jensch | 1973 UL5 | Alfred Jensch, German astronomer* |
3246 Bidstrup | 1976 GQ3 | Herluf Bidstrup, Danish caricaturist † |
3247 Di Martino | 1981 YE | Mario di Martino, Italian astronomer* |
3248 Farinella | 1982 FK | Paolo Farinella, Italian astronomer* |
3249 Musashino | 1977 DT4 | Musashino, a suburb of Tokyo, Japan* |
3250 Martebo | 1979 EB | Martebo, Gotland island, Sweden † |
3251 Eratosthenes | 6536 P-L | Eratosthenes, Ancient Greek scientist |
3252 Johnny | 1981 EM4 | Johnny Carson, American TV host and comedian, and amateur astronomer [Schmadel] |
3253 Gradie | 1982 HQ1 | Jonathan Carey Gradie, American astronomer |
3254 Bus | 1982 UM | Schelte John Bus, American astronomer |
3255 Tholen | 1980 RA | David James Tholen, American astronomer |
3256 Daguerre | 1981 SJ1 | Louis Daguerre, French chemist and artist, pioneer of photography (the Daguerreotype process) |
3257 Hanzlík | 1982 GG | Stanislav Hanzlík, Czech meteorologist and climatologist † |
3258 Somnium | 1983 RJ | Kepler's Somnium, sive opus posthumum de astronomia lunaris (The Dream, or Posthumous Work on Lunar Astronomy), which combined a serious study of lunar astronomy and the fictional account of a journey to the Moon |
3259 Brownlee | 1984 SZ4 | Donald Eugene Brownlee, American astronomer* |
3260 Vizbor | 1974 SO2 | Yurii Iosifovich Vizbor, Russian actor, poet, writer, composer and playwright † |
3261 Tvardovskij | 1979 SF9 | Aleksandr Tvardovsky, Soviet poet † |
3262 Miune | 1983 WB | Miune, mountain in Kōchi, Japan |
3263 Bligh | 1932 CN | William Bligh, captain of the Bounty |
3264 Bounty | 1934 AF | HMS Bounty, ship |
3265 Fletcher | 1953 VN2 | Fletcher Christian, Bounty mutineer |
3266 Bernardus | 1978 PA | Andres Bernardus Muller, Dutch astronomer † |
3267 Glo | 1981 AA | Nickname of Eleanor F. Helin, American astronomer, comet hunter, and advisor to the Planetary Society † |
3268 De Sanctis | 1981 DD | Giovanni de Sanctis, Italian astronomer* |
3269 Vibert-Douglas | 1981 EX16 | Allie Vibert Douglas, Canadian astronomer † |
3270 Dudley | 1982 DA | H. Dudley Wright, engineer, inventor, entrepreneur and benefactor of science, education and the arts in California and in Geneva, Switzerland. Name endorsed by E. M. Shoemaker MPC not Dudley Observatory, in Albany, N.Y. and later Schenectady, N.Y.. Originally noted for its work in astrometry and latterly (1956–1976) in the study of micrometeoroids. It now functions as an educational foundation* |
3271 Ul | 1982 RB | Ul, a lunar deity in the mythology of Vanuatu [Schmadel] |
3272 Tillandz | 1938 DB1 | Elias Erici Tillandz (Elias Tillander), Swedish physician and botanist* |
3273 Drukar | 1975 TS2 | Ivan Fyodorov, one of the first printers of books in Russia and Ukraine. The word Drukar means ‘printer’ in Ukrainian and old Russian. [Schmadel] |
3274 Maillen | 1981 QO2 | Maillen, Belgium* |
3275 Oberndorfer | 1982 HE1 | Hans Oberndorfer, German amateur astronomer, director of the Volkssternwarte München (Munich Public Observatory) † ‡ |
3276 Porta Coeli | 1982 RZ1 | Porta Coeli ("Gateway to Heaven") convent in Tišnov, Czech Republic † |
3277 Aaronson | 1984 AF1 | Marc Aaronson, American astronomer |
3278 Běhounek | 1984 BT | František Běhounek, Czech physicist † |
3279 Solon | 9103 P-L | Solon, Greek lawmaker* |
3280 Grétry | 1933 SJ | André Ernest Modeste Grétry, Belgian (Walloon) composer |
3281 Maupertuis | 1938 DZ | Pierre Louis Maupertuis, French mathematician and astronomer |
3282 Spencer Jones | 1949 DA | Sir Harold Spencer Jones, British astronomer, former Astronomer Royal |
3283 Skorina | 1979 QA10 | Frantsisk Skorina, first doctor of medicine in Belarus, printer and publisher* |
3284 Niebuhr | 1953 NB | Reinhold Niebuhr, American theologian* |
3285 Ruth Wolfe | 1983 VW1 | Ruth F. Wolfe, American geologist, colleague of Gene and Carolyn Shoemaker at the United States Geological Survey* |
3286 Anatoliya | 1980 BV | Anatoly V. Karachkin, brother of the discoverer's husband [Schmadel] |
3287 Olmstead | 1981 DK1 | C. Michelle Olmstead, American astronomer* |
3288 Seleucus | 1982 DV | Seleucus I Nicator, one of the generals of Alexander the Great and heir to the
largest part of his empire [MPC 10046] not Seleucus of Seleucia, Greek astronomer* |
3289 Mitani | 1934 RP | Tetsuyasu Mitani, Japanese astronomer not Takefumi Mitani, Japanese astronomer* |
3290 Azabu | 1973 SZ1 | Azabu, a district of Tokyo, Japan |
3291 Dunlap | 1982 VX3 | J. Lawrence Dunlap, American astronomer* |
3292 Sather | 2631 P-L | Bob Sather, research assistant Lunar and Planetary Laboratory[3] not Robert E. Sather, American astronomer* |
3293 Rontaylor | 4650 P-L | Ronald C. Taylor, American astronomer* |
3294 Carlvesely | 6563 P-L | Carl D. Vesely, American astronomer* |
3295 Murakami | 1950 DH | Tadayoshi Murakami, Japanese astronomer |
3296 Bosque Alegre | 1975 SF | Named after the astrophysical station of Córdoba Observatory in Argentina |
3297 Hong Kong | 1978 WN14 | Hong Kong, China |
3298 Massandra | 1979 OB15 | Massandra, town in Crimea [Schmadel] |
3299 Hall | 1980 TX5 | John Scoville Hall, American astronomer and director of the Lowell Observatory from 1958 to 1977[MPC 10312] [1] not Asaph Hall, American astronomer, nor Donald Hall, American astronomer |
3300 McGlasson | 1928 NA | Scottish Surname of a small clan located in the highlands of Scotland. |
3301–3400 | ||
3301 Jansje | 1978 CT | Jansje Verveer, mother of Dutch astronomer Arie Verveer † |
3302 Schliemann | 1977 RS6 | Heinrich Schliemann, German archaeologist* |
3303 Merta | 1967 UN | František Merta (1872–1953), teacher and journalist. Grandfather of the discoverer. [Schmadel] |
3304 Pearce | 1981 EQ21 | Joseph A. Pearce, Canadian astronomer † |
3305 Ceadams | 1985 KB | Charles Edward Adams, American astronomer* |
3306 Byron | 1979 SM11 | Lord Byron, British poet* |
3307 Athabasca | 1981 DE1 | The Athabascans, ancient people of North America † |
3308 Ferreri | 1981 EP | Walter Ferreri, Italian astronomer* |
3309 Brorfelde | 1982 BH | Brorfelde Observatory in Denmark |
3310 Patsy | 1931 TS2 | Named in honor of the discoverer's wife [Schmadel] |
3311 Podobed | 1976 QM1 | Vladimir Vladimirovich Podobed, Soviet astronomer † |
3312 Pedersen | 1984 SN | Holger Pedersen, Danish astronomer* |
3313 Mendel | 1980 DG | Gregor Johann Mendel, Czech-Austrian father of genetics † |
3314 Beals | 1981 FH | Carlyle Smith Beals, Canadian astronomer † |
3315 Chant | 1984 CZ | Clarence Augustus Chant, Canadian astronomer † ‡ |
3316 Herzberg | 1984 CN1 | Gerhard Herzberg, German-born Canadian chemist and astronomer † |
3317 Paris | 1984 KF | Paris, Trojan prince |
3318 Blixen | 1985 HB | Karen Blixen, Danish writer |
3319 Kibi | 1977 EJ5 | Kibi Province (ancient name of Okayama Prefecture and eastern half of Hiroshima Prefecture), Japan |
3320 Namba | 1982 VZ4 | Naniwa, traditional name of Osaka, Japan |
3321 Dasha | 1975 TZ2 | Darya Lavrentyevna Mikhailova (known as Dasha Sevastopolskaya), Russian sister of charity † |
3322 Lidiya | 1975 XY1 | Lidiya Vissarionovna Zvereva, the first Russian female aviator † |
3323 Turgenev | 1979 SY9 | Ivan Turgenev, Russian writer † |
3324 Avsyuk | 1983 CW1 | Yurii Nikolaevich Avsyuk, Russian geophysicist (specialist in gravimetry and geodynamics) † |
3325 TARDIS | 1984 JZ | The TARDIS, time machine in Doctor Who |
3326 Agafonikov | 1985 FL | Askol'd M. Agafonikov, Russian(?) geophysicist † |
3327 Campins | 1985 PW | Humberto Campins (Humberto Campins Camejo), Venezuelan-born American astronomer † |
3328 Interposita | 1985 QD1 | The discovery film was exposed hastily between two satellite laser ranging sessions in the adjacent dome. (M 27125) |
3329 Golay | 1985 RT1 | Marcel Golay, Swiss astronomer* |
3330 Gantrisch | 1985 RU1 | Gantrisch, a mountain south of Bern in Switzerland* |
3331 Kvistaberg | 1979 QS | Kvistaberg, site of Uppsala Observatory, Sweden † |
3332 Raksha | 1978 NT1 | Yury Mikhailovich Raksha, Russian artist † |
3333 Schaber | 1980 TG5 | Gerald Gene Schaber, American planetary geologist* |
3334 Somov | 1981 YR | Mikhail M. Somov, Soviet Antarctic explorer † ‡ + |
3335 Quanzhou | 1966 AA | Quanzhou, China |
3336 Grygar | 1971 UX | Jiří Grygar, Czech astronomer* |
3337 Miloš | 1971 UG1 | Miloš Tichý, Czech astronomer* |
3338 Richter | 1973 UX5 | Nikolaus B. Richter (1910–1980), first director of the Tautenburg Observatory (1960–1975)MPC 10549 not Charles Francis Richter, American seismologist* |
3339 Treshnikov | 1978 LB | Aleksei Fedorovich Treshnikov, Soviet Antarctic explorer † ‡ |
3340 Yinhai | 1979 TK | Yinhai, China |
3341 Hartmann | 1980 OD | William Kenneth Hartmann, American planetary scientist, writer, and painter † |
3342 Fivesparks | 1982 BD3 | In honor of Newton and Margaret Mayall, American astronomer. The name refers to their residence in Cambridge, Massachusetts, as explained in[4] |
3343 Nedzel | 1982 HS | V. Alexander Nedzel [Schmadel] |
3344 Modena | 1982 JA | Modena, city in Italy [Schmadel] |
3345 Tarkovskij | 1982 YC1 | Andrei Tarkovsky, Soviet film producer † |
3346 Gerla | 1951 SD | Gertrude Lawrence, English actress [Schmadel] |
3347 Konstantin | 1975 VN1 | Konstantin Kalinin, Soviet aviator † |
3348 Pokryshkin | 1978 EA3 | Aleksandr Ivanovich Pokryshkin, Soviet pilot † |
3349 Manas | 1979 FH2 | Manas, a Kyrgyz epic poem † |
3350 Scobee | 1980 PJ | Francis "Dick" Scobee, STS-51-L crew member |
3351 Smith | 1980 RN1 | Michael J. Smith, STS-51-L crew member |
3352 McAuliffe | 1981 CW | Christa McAuliffe, STS-51-L crew member |
3353 Jarvis | 1981 YC | Gregory Jarvis, STS-51-L crew member |
3354 McNair | 1984 CW | Ronald McNair, STS-51-L crew member |
3355 Onizuka | 1984 CC1 | Ellison Onizuka, STS-51-L crew member |
3356 Resnik | 1984 EU | Judith Resnik, STS-51-L crew member |
3357 Tolstikov | 1984 FT | Yevgeny Ivanovich Tolstikov, Russian meteorologist † ‡ + |
3358 Anikushin | 1978 RX | Mikhail Anikushin, Russian sculptor † |
3359 Purcari | 1978 RA6 | Moldavian wine producer † |
3360 Syrinx | 1981 VA | Syrinx, a nymph |
3361 Orpheus | 1982 HR | Orpheus, mythological Greek musician |
3362 Khufu | 1984 QA | Khufu, Egyptian pharaoh |
3363 Bowen | 1960 EE | Ira Sprague Bowen, American astronomer* |
3364 Zdenka | 1984 GF | Zdeňka Vávrová, Czech astronomer † OR Zdenka Kadla, Chechen-Russian astronomer, wife of A. A. Mikhailov ‡ |
3365 Recogne | 1985 CG2 | Recogne in the Ardennes, Belgium* |
3366 Gödel | 1985 SD1 | Kurt Gödel, Austro-Hungarian logician |
3367 Alex | 1983 CA3 | Alex R. Baltutis, grandson of the discoverer [Schmadel] |
3368 Duncombe | 1985 QT | Raynor Lockwood Duncombe, American astronomer [1] |
3369 Freuchen | 1985 UZ | Peter Freuchen, Danish polar explorer and author* |
3370 Kohsai | 1934 CU | Hiroki Kosai, Japanese astronomer |
3371 Giacconi | 1955 RZ | Riccardo Giacconi, Italian-born American astrophysicist and winner (with Raymond Davis and Masatoshi Koshiba) of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2002* |
3372 Bratijchuk | 1976 SP4 | M. V. Bratiichuk, Ukrainian astronomer* |
3373 Koktebelia | 1978 QQ2 | Koktebel, a resort on the Black Sea in Crimea* |
3374 Namur | 1980 KO | Namur, capital of the region of Wallonia in Belgium* |
3375 Amy | 1981 JY1 | Amy Shoemaker Prescott, relative of the discoverer [Schmadel] |
3376 Armandhammer | 1982 UJ8 | Armand Hammer, American industrialist and art collector* |
3377 Lodewijk | 4122 P-L | Lodewijk Woltjer, Dutch astronomer † |
3378 Susanvictoria | A922 WB | Susan Titus and Victoria Van Biesbroeck Streeter, granddaughters of the discoverer [Schmadel] |
3379 Oishi | 1931 TJ1 | Hideo Oishi, Japanese amateur astronomer |
3380 Awaji | 1940 EF | Awaji Island, Japan |
3381 Mikkola | 1941 UG | Seppo Mikkola, Finnish astronomer* |
3382 Cassidy | 1948 RD | William Arthur Cassidy, American meteoriticist* |
3383 Koyama | 1951 AB | Hisako Koyama, Japanese amateur astronomer |
3384 Daliya | 1974 SB1 | Vladimir Dahl, Russian lexicologist and ethnographer [Schmadel] |
3385 Bronnina | 1979 SK11 | Nina Mikhajlovna Bronnikova, Russian astronomer † |
3386 Klementinum | 1980 FA | The Clementinum, college in Prague † |
3387 Greenberg | 1981 WE | Richard J. Greenberg, planetary scientist at the
University of ArizonaMPC 12803, not Jerome Mayo Greenberg (J. Mayo Greenberg), American cosmochemist* |
3388 Tsanghinchi | 1981 YR1 | Hin-Chi Tsang, Chinese* |
3389 Sinzot | 1984 DU | Family name of the discoverer's grandmother [Schmadel] |
3390 Demanet | 1984 ES1 | The family name of the discoverer's paternal grandmotherr* [MPC 15573] |
3391 Sinon | 1977 DD3 | Sinon, mythical Greek warrior |
3392 Setouchi | 1979 YB | Setouchi Region, Japan |
3393 Štúr | 1984 WY1 | Ľudovít Štúr(1815–1856), Slovak leader and writer [Schmadel] |
3394 Banno | 1986 DB | Yoshiaki Banno, Japanese engineer |
3395 Jitka | 1985 UN | Jitka Beneš, Czech astronomer † |
3396 Muazzez | A915 TE | Muazzez K. Lohmiller, staff member of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory [Schmadel] |
3397 Leyla | 1964 XA | Nancy Leyla Lohmiller, daughter of Muazzez Lohmiller [Schmadel] |
3398 Stättmayer | 1978 PC | Peter Stättmayer, German amateur astronomer, director of the Volkssternwarte München (Munich Public Observatory) † ‡ |
3399 Kobzon | 1979 SZ9 | Joseph Kobzon, Soviet singer † |
3400 Aotearoa | 1981 GX | Māori name for New Zealand* |
3401–3500 | ||
3401 Vanphilos | 1981 PA | Named by G. V. Williams in honor of his friends Vanessa Hall and Philip Osborne |
3402 Wisdom | 1981 PB | Jack Wisdom, American astronomer* |
3403 Tammy | 1981 SW | * |
3404 Hinderer | 1934 CY | Fritz Hinderer, German astronomer* |
3405 Daiwensai | 1964 UQ | Wen-Sai Dai, Chinese astronomer* |
3406 Omsk | 1969 DA | Omsk, Russia † |
3407 Jimmysimms | 1973 DT | James A. C. Simms III, American system administrator [MPC 34618] |
3408 Shalamov | 1977 QG4 | Varlam Tikhonovich Shalamov, Soviet writer † |
3409 Abramov | 1977 RE6 | Fyodor Abramov, Soviet writer † |
3410 Vereshchagin | 1978 SZ7 | Vasili Vasilyevich Vereshchagin, Russian painter † |
3411 Debetencourt | 1980 LK | * |
3412 Kafka | 1983 AU2 | Franz Kafka, German-Czech writer |
3413 Andriana | 1983 CB3 | * |
3414 Champollion | 1983 DJ | Jean-François Champollion, French linguist |
3415 Danby | 1928 SL | Anthony Danby (John Michael Anthony Danby), British-born mathematician formerly of North Carolina State University † |
3416 Dorrit | 1931 VP | Dorrit Hoffleit, American astronomer |
3417 Tamblyn | 1937 GG | Peter Tamblyn, American astronomer[5] |
3418 Izvekov | 1973 QZ1 | Vladimir Andreevich Izvekov, Soviet astronomer † ‡ |
3419 Guth | 1981 JZ | Vladimír Guth, Slovak astronomer † |
3420 Standish | 1984 EB | E Myles Standish, Jr., American astronomer, Caltech/JPL |
3421 Yangchenning | 1975 WK1 | Yang Zhenning (Chen Ning Franklin Yang), Chinese-American physicist |
3422 Reid | 1978 OJ | * |
3423 Slouka | 1981 CK | Hubert Slouka, Czech astronomer † |
3424 Nušl | 1982 CD | František Nušl, Czech astronomer and mathematician † |
3425 Hurukawa | 1929 BD | Kiichiro Hurukawa, Japanese astronomer |
3426 Seki | 1932 CQ | Tsutomu Seki, Japanese astronomer* |
3427 Szentmártoni | 1938 AD | Béla Szentmártoni, Hungarian amateur astronomer † ‡ ┼ |
3428 Roberts | 1952 JH | Walter Orr Roberts, American astronomer and atmospheric physicist* |
3429 Chuvaev | 1974 SU1 | Konstantin Konstantinovich Chuvaev, Soviet astronomer † |
3430 Bradfield | 1980 TF4 | William A. Bradfield, Australian amateur astronomer* |
3431 Nakano | 1984 QC | Syuichi Nakano, Japanese astronomer |
3432 Kobuchizawa | 1986 EE | Kobuchizawa Observatory in Japan which contributes asteroid (Near Earth Objects) observations to the Minor Planet Center |
3433 Fehrenbach | 1963 TJ1 | Charles Fehrenbach, French astronomer* |
3434 Hurless | 1981 VO | Carolyn Hurless, American amateur astronomer |
3435 Boury | 1981 XC2 | Arsène Boury, Belgian astronomer* |
3436 Ibadinov | 1976 SS3 | Hursandkul Ibadinov, Tajik astronomer † |
3437 Kapitsa | 1982 UZ5 | Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa, Russian physicist, winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1978 † |
3438 Inarradas | 1974 SD5 | * |
3439 Lebofsky | 1983 RL2 | Larry Allen Lebofsky, or Marcia Jean Lebofsky, both American astronomers* |
3440 Stampfer | 1950 DD | Simon Stampfer, Austrian geodesist and astronomer, pioneer of cinematography* |
3441 Pochaina | 1969 TS1 | Pochaina, a tributary of the Dnieper in the Ukraine |
3442 Yashin | 1978 TO7 | Lev Yashin, Soviet goalkeeper |
3443 Leetsungdao | 1979 SB1 | Tsung-Dao Lee, Chinese American physicist and winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics* |
3444 Stepanian | 1980 RJ2 | Jivan A. Stepanian, Armenian astronomer* |
3445 Pinson | 1983 FC | William H. Pinson, American geochemist* |
3446 Combes | 1942 EB | Michel-Alain Combes, French astronomer |
3447 Burckhalter | 1956 SC | Charles Burckhalter, American astronomer* |
3448 Narbut | 1977 QA5 | Heorhiy Narbut |
3449 Abell | 1978 VR9 | George O. Abell, American astronomer* |
3450 Dommanget | 1983 QJ | Jean Dommanget, Belgian astronomer* |
3451 Mentor | 1984 HA1 | Mentor, mythological Greek king, son of Imbrus at Pedaseus, father of Imbrius, ally of the Trojans † |
3452 Hawke | 1980 OA | Bernard Ray Hawke, American planetary geologist* |
3453 Dostoevsky | 1981 SS5 | Fyodor Dostoevsky, Russian writer |
3454 Lieske | 1981 WB1 | Jay Henry Lieske, American astronomer* |
3455 Kristensen | 1985 QC | Leif Kahl Kristensen, Danish astronomer* |
3456 Etiennemarey | 1985 RS2 | Étienne-Jules Marey, French surgeon, physiologist, inventor of the chronophotograph, pioneer of cinematography, contemporary of Eadweard Muybridge |
3457 Arnenordheim | 1985 RA3 | Arne Nordheim, Norwegian composer* |
3458 Boduognat | 1985 RT3 | Boduognat or Boduognatus, leader of the Nervii in Gaul who, with the Atrebates and Viromandui, fought Julius Caesar in 57 BC |
3459 Bodil | 1986 GB | * |
3460 Ashkova | 1973 QB2 | * |
3461 Mandelshtam | 1977 SA1 | Osip Mandelstam, Soviet poet † |
3462 Zhouguangzhao | 1981 UA10 | Zhou Guangzhao |
3463 Kaokuen | 1981 XJ2 | Charles K. Kao |
3464 Owensby | 1983 BA | * |
3465 Trevires | 1984 SQ5 | * |
3466 Ritina | 1975 EA6 | discoverer's daughter Margarita, who was also an astronomer at CrAO † |
3467 Bernheim | 1981 SF2 | Robert Burnham, Jr. † |
3468 Urgenta | 1975 AM | * |
3469 Bulgakov | 1982 UL7 | Mikhail Bulgakov, Soviet writer † |
3470 Yaronika | 1975 ES | discoverer's son Yaroslav, who also works at CrAO † |
3471 Amelin | 1977 QK2 | Valentin Mikhailovich Amelin, Soviet geodesist † |
3472 Upgren | 1981 EJ10 | Arthur Reinhold Upgren, American astronomer* |
3473 Sapporo | A924 EG | Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan* |
3474 Linsley | 1962 HE | * |
3475 Fichte | 1972 TD | Hubert Fichte, German writer [MPC 34618] |
3476 Dongguan | 1978 UF2 | Dongguan, China |
3477 Kazbegi | 1979 KH | Mount Kazbek, on the border between Georgia and Russia |
3478 Fanale | 1979 XG | Fraser Partington Fanale, American planetary geologist* |
3479 Malaparte | 1980 TQ | Curzio Malaparte (Kurt (Erich) Suckert), Italian writer † |
3480 Abante | 1981 GB | * |
3481 Xianglupeak | 1982 DS6 | Xianglu Peak ("Incense Burner Peak", 557 m), highest point of the Fragrant Hill Park, northwest of Beijing, China † |
3482 Lesnaya | 1975 VY4 | village Lesnaya, near which Swedes were defeated by the Russian army in the Battle of Lesnaya † |
3483 Svetlov | 1976 YP2 | Mikhail Arkadyevich Svetlov, Soviet poet † |
3484 Neugebauer | 1978 NE | Paul Victor Neugebauer, German astronomer or Otto Neugebauer, historian of astronomy, or Marcia Neugebauer, American astronomer* |
3485 Barucci | 1983 NU | Maria Antonietta Barucci, Italian astronomer* |
3486 Fulchignoni | 1984 CR | Marcello Fulchignoni, Italian astronomer |
3487 Edgeworth | 1978 UF | Kenneth Essex Edgeworth, Irish engineer [MPC 34618] |
3488 Brahic | 1980 PM | André Brahic, French astronomer* |
3489 Lottie | 1983 AT2 | * |
3490 Šolc | 1984 SV | Ivan Šolc, Czech inventor † |
3491 Fridolin | 1984 SM4 | Fridolin Becker, Swiss cartographer or Fridolin Anderwert, Swiss politician or Saint Fridolin (Fridolin von Säckingen), Irish missionary* |
3492 Petra-Pepi | 1985 DQ | Daughter of the discoverer [MPC 21955] † |
3493 Stepanov | 1976 GR6 | Vladimir Yevgenyevich Stepanov, Soviet physicist † |
3494 Purple Mountain | 1980 XW | Purple Mountain Observatory, China |
3495 Colchagua | 1981 NU | Colchagua Province, Chile † |
3496 Arieso | 1977 RC | name consists of acronyms of Astronomisches Rechen-Institut and the European Southern Observatory † |
3497 Innanen | 1941 HJ | Kimmo Innanen, Finnish-Canadian astronomer † |
3498 Belton | 1981 EG14 | Michael J. Belton, astronomer † |
3499 Hoppe | 1981 VW1 | Johannes Hoppe, German astronomer, or Peter Hoppe, German planetary scientist* |
3500 Kobayashi | A919 SD | Takao Kobayashi, astronomer* |
3,501–4,000 [] | ||
3501–3600 | ||
3501 Olegiya | 1971 QU | Oleg Nikolaevich Korotsev, Russian astronomer † ‡ |
3502 Huangpu | 1964 TR1 | Huangpu District, Shanghai † |
3503 Brandt | 1981 EF17 | John Conrad Brandt, American astronomer and author † |
3504 Kholshevnikov | 1981 RV3 | Konstantin Vladislavovich Kholshevnikov, Russian astronomer † |
3505 Byrd | 1983 AM | Deborah Byrd, producer of the Earth & Sky radio series † |
3506 French | 1984 CO1 | Linda M. French, American Astronomer, Professor of Physics, Illinois Wesleyan University |
3507 Vilas | 1982 UX | Faith Vilas, American planetary scientist and (2005-2010) Director of the MMT Observatory in Arizona[6] |
3508 Pasternak | 1980 DO5 | Boris Pasternak, Russian writer † |
3509 Sanshui | 1978 UH2 | Sanshui City |
3510 Veeder | 1982 TP | Glenn John Veeder, American astronomer* |
3511 Tsvetaeva | 1982 TC2 | Marina Tsvetaeva, Soviet poet † |
3512 Eriepa | 1984 AC1 | Erie, Pennsylvania |
3513 Quqinyue | 1965 UZ | Qu Qinyue, Chinese astronomer [MPC 34619] |
3514 Hooke | 1971 UJ | Robert Hooke, English scientist* |
3515 Jindra | 1982 UH2 | Lumír Jindra, Czech pharmacologist and friend of the discoverer † |
3516 Rusheva | 1982 UH7 | Nadya Rusheva, Russian painter* |
3517 Tatianicheva | 1976 SE1 | * |
3518 Florena | 1977 QC4 | * |
3519 Ambiorix | 1984 DO | Ambiorix, leader of Belgian tribe in time of the Romans † |
3520 Klopsteg | 1952 SG | probably American physicist Paul E. Klopsteg* |
3521 Comrie | 1982 MH | Leslie Comrie, New Zealand-born astronomer and pioneer in mathematical computation* |
3522 Becker | 1941 SW | Ludwig Becker, German astronomer* |
3523 Arina | 1975 TV2 | * |
3524 Schulz | 1981 EE27 | * |
3525 Paul | 1983 CX2 | * |
3526 Jeffbell | 1984 CN | Space scientist/writer Jeffrey F. Bell* |
3527 McCord | 1985 GE1 | Thomas Bard McCord, American astronomer (planetary geologist)* |
3528 Counselman | 1981 EW3 | Charles Claude Counselman III, American planetary scientist † |
3529 Dowling | 1981 EQ19 | Timothy Edward Dowling, American planetary scientist † |
3530 Hammel | 1981 EC20 | Heidi Beth Hammel, American planetary scientist † ‡ |
3531 Cruikshank | 1981 FB | Dale Cruikshank, NASA space scientist † |
3532 Tracie | 1983 AS2 | * |
3533 Toyota | 1986 UE | Toyota, Aichi, Japan* |
3534 Sax | 1936 XA | Antoine-Joseph "Adolphe" Sax, Belgian musical instrument designer, best known for inventing the saxophone* |
3535 Ditte | 1979 SN11 | the main character of Ditte, a human child novel by Martin Andersen Nexø † |
3536 Schleicher | 1981 EV20 | David Glenn Schleicher, American astronomer † |
3537 Jürgen | 1982 VT | Jürgen Rahe (1939-1997), Director of NASA's Solar System Exploration Division. |
3538 Nelsonia | 6548 P-L | * |
3539 Weimar | 1967 GF1 | Weimar, Germany* |
3540 Protesilaos | 1973 UF5 | Protesilaos, mythical person related to Trojan War* |
3541 Graham | 1984 ML | * |
3542 Tanjiazhen | 1964 TN2 | Tan Jiazhen, Chinese geneticist [MPC 34619] |
3543 Ningbo | 1964 VA3 | Ningbo Chinese city † |
3544 Borodino | 1977 RD4 | Village in Russia, where the Battle of Borodino took place in 1812 † |
3545 Gaffey | 1981 WK2 | Michael James Gaffey, American planetary geologist* |
3546 Atanasoff | 1983 SC | John Vincent Atanasoff, American (of Bulgarian descent) mathematician and physicist, inventor of the Atanasoff–Berry Computer* |
3547 Serov | 1978 TM6 | Valentin Serov, Russian painter † |
3548 Eurybates | 1973 SO | Eurybates, mythological Greek soldier* |
3549 Hapke | 1981 YH | Bruce William Hapke, American planetary scientist* |
3550 Link | 1981 YS | František Link, Czech astronomer † |
3551 Verenia | 1983 RD | First vestal virgin consecrated by the legendary Roman king Numa Pompilius* |
3552 Don Quixote | 1983 SA | Don Quixote, eponymous hero of the novel by Cervantes* |
3553 Mera | 1985 JA | Maera, a daughter of Praetus |
3554 Amun | 1986 EB | Amun, Egyptian god* |
3555 Miyasaka | 1931 TC1 | Seidai Miyasaka, Japanese astronomer |
3556 Lixiaohua | 1964 UO | Li Xiaohua, Chinese* |
3557 Sokolsky | 1977 QE1 | Andrei Georgievich Sokolskii, Soviet astronomer † |
3558 Shishkin | 1978 SQ2 | Ivan Shishkin, Russian painter † |
3559 Violaumayer | 1980 PH | Martin Mayer, German amateur astronomer, operating from the Volkssternwarte Violau (Violau Public Observatory) † ‡ † |
3560 Chenqian | 1980 RZ2 | Chen Qian, director of the History Museum of Chinese Astronomy, helped to popularize astronomy in China. Dictionary of Minor Planet Names[7] p. 281 |
3561 Devine | 1983 HO | * |
3562 Ignatius | 1984 AZ | Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) |
3563 Canterbury | 1985 FE | Canterbury, New Zealand* |
3564 Talthybius | 1985 TC1 | Talthybius, mythological Greek soldier* |
3565 Ojima | 1986 YD | Ojima, Gunma, Japan, where the discoverers' observatory was situated* |
3566 Levitan | 1979 YA9 | Isaac Levitan, Russian painter † |
3567 Alvema | 1930 VD | * |
3568 ASCII | 1936 UB | ASCII Corporation, Japan |
3569 Kumon | 1938 DN1 | Toru Kumon, Japanese educator |
3570 Wuyeesun | 1979 XO | Wu Yeesun, a famous bonsai artist † |
3571 Milanštefánik | 1982 EJ | Milan Rastislav Štefánik, Slovak-French astronomer, meteorologist, general, one of the founders of Czechoslovakia † |
3572 Leogoldberg | 1954 UJ2 | Leo Goldberg, American astronomer* |
3573 Holmberg | 1982 QO1 | Erik Holmberg, Swedish astronomer † |
3574 Rudaux | 1982 TQ | Lucien Rudaux, French astronomer* |
3575 Anyuta | 1984 DU2 | Anna Aleksandrovna Shishmareva, Soviet parachutist † |
3576 Galina | 1984 DB3 | Galina Bogdanovna Pyasetskyaya, Soviet parachutist † |
3577 Putilin | 1969 TK | Ivan Ivanovich Putilin, Soviet minor planet researcher † |
3578 Carestia | 1977 CC | * |
3579 Rockholt | 1977 YA | Ronald Rockholt, scientist † |
3580 Avery | 1983 CS2 | * |
3581 Alvarez | 1985 HC | Luis Alvarez and his son Walter Alvarez, discoverers of the Iridium layer associated with the meteor impact which killed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. |
3582 Cyrano | 1986 TT5 | Cyrano de Bergerac, French dramatist* |
3583 Burdett | 1929 TQ | * |
3584 Aisha | 1981 TW | * |
3585 Goshirakawa | 1987 BE | Emperor Go-Shirakawa, Japan |
3586 Vasnetsov | 1978 SW6 | Viktor Vasnetsov and Apollinary Vasnetsov, Russian painters † |
3587 Descartes | 1981 RK5 | René Descartes, French philosopher* |
3588 Kirik | 1981 TH4 | * |
3589 Loyola | 1984 AB1 | Loyola, Spain, birthplace of Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) |
3590 Holst | 1984 CQ | Gustav Holst, composer* |
3591 Vladimirskij | 1978 QJ2 | * |
3592 Nedbal | 1980 CT | Oskar Nedbal, Czech composer † |
3593 Osip | 1981 EB20 | * |
3594 Scotti | 1983 CN | James V. Scotti (born 1960), astronomer (member of Spacewatch team) |
3595 Gallagher | 1985 TF1 | * |
3596 Meriones | 1985 VO | Meriones, mythical Greek warrior* |
3597 Kakkuri | 1941 UL | Juhani Kakkuri, geodesist* |
3598 Saucier | 1977 KK1 | Agnes E. Glassey Saucier, grandmother of the discoverer |
3599 Basov | 1978 PB3 | * |
3600 Archimedes | 1978 SL7 | Archimedes, ancient Greek scientist* |
3601–3700 | ||
3601 Velikhov | 1979 SP9 | * |
3602 Lazzaro | 1981 DQ2 | Daniela Lazzaro, Brazilian astronomer* |
3603 Gajdušek | 1981 RM | Vilém Gajdušek, Czech telescope maker † |
3604 Berkhuijsen | 5550 P-L | Ellie Berkhuijsen, Dutch astronomer † |
3605 Davy | 1932 WB | Humphry Davy, chemist* |
3606 Pohjola | 1939 SF | Pohjola, location in Finnish mythology* |
3607 Naniwa | 1977 DO4 | Naniwa, traditional name of Osaka, Japan |
3608 Kataev | 1978 SD1 | * |
3609 Liloketai | 1980 VM1 | Loke-Tai Li, Chinese educator* |
3610 Decampos | 1981 EA1 | * |
3611 Dabu | 1981 YY1 | Dabu County, Guangdong, China [MPC 34619] |
3612 Peale | 1982 TW | * |
3613 Kunlun | 1982 VJ11 | Kunlun, mountain range in China [MPC 34619] |
3614 Tumilty | 1983 AE1 | Jodi Anne Tumilty Thomas, daughter-in-law of the discoverer [MPC 25443] |
3615 Safronov | 1983 WZ | Viktor Safronov, Soviet astronomer † |
3616 Glazunov | 1984 JJ2 | Ilya Glazunov, Russian painter † |
3617 Eicher | 1984 LJ | * |
3618 Kuprin | 1979 QP8 | Aleksandr Kuprin, Russian writer † |
3619 Nash | 1981 EU35 | * Douglas B. Nash, American planetary scientist |
3620 Platonov | 1981 RU2 | Andrei Platonov, Russian writer † |
3621 Curtis | 1981 SQ1 | * |
3622 Ilinsky | 1981 SX7 | Igor Ilyinsky, Soviet actor † |
3623 Chaplin | 1981 TG2 | Charlie Chaplin, English comedy actor † |
3624 Mironov | 1982 TH2 | Andrei Mironov, Soviet actor and producer † |
3625 Fracastoro | 1984 HZ1 | Mario Girolamo Fracastoro, Italian astronomer* |
3626 Ohsaki | 1929 PA | Shoji Osaki, Japanese astronomical historian |
3627 Sayers | 1973 DS | Dorothy Leigh Sayers, British author [MPC 34619] |
3628 Božněmcová | 1979 WD | Božena Němcová, Czech writer † |
3629 Lebedinskij | 1982 WK | Aleksandr Ignatevich Lebedinski, Soviet astronomer † ‡ |
3630 Lubomír | 1984 QN | Slavic first name † |
3631 Sigyn | 1987 BV1 | Daughter of the discoverer* |
3632 Grachevka | 1976 SJ4 | a village in Tambov Oblast (now Lipetsk Oblast), Russia, the birthplace of discoverer's parents Stepan Chernykh and Melaniya Chernykh † |
3633 Mira | 1980 EE2 | * |
3634 Iwan | 1980 FV | Iwan P. Williams, British astronomer † |
3635 Kreutz | 1981 WO1 | Heinrich Kreutz, German astronomer* |
3636 Pajdušáková | 1982 UJ2 | Ľudmila Pajdušáková, Slovak astronomer † |
3637 O'Meara | 1984 UQ | Stephen James O'Meara, American astronomer, astronomy writer and author and contributing editor to Sky and Telescope † |
3638 Davis | 1984 WX | Donald R. Davis, senior scientist at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson |
3639 Weidenschilling | 1985 TX | Stuart J. Weidenschilling, American planetary scientist † |
3640 Gostin | 1985 TR3 | Victor A. Gostin, Australian geologist, researcher of Australian impact craters |
3641 Williams Bay | A922 WC | Williams Bay, Wisconsin, home of Yerkes Observatory* |
3642 Frieden | 1953 XL1 | German for "peace"* |
3643 Tienchanglin | 1978 UN2 | Chang-Lin Tien, former Chancellor of the University of California at Berkeley † ‡ |
3644 Kojitaku | 1931 TW | Takuo Kojima, Japanese astronomer |
3645 Fabini | 1981 QZ | Tatiana Fabini, Slovak astronomy writer † |
3646 Aduatiques | 1985 RK4 | * |
3647 Dermott | 1986 AD1 | Stanley Frederick Dermott, American astronomer* |
3648 Raffinetti | 1957 HK | * |
3649 Guillermina | 1976 HQ | * |
3650 Kunming | 1978 UO2 | Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province in China † |
3651 Friedman | 1978 VB5 | Named after Louis and Connie Friedman. Louis Friedman was a co-founder of the Planetary Society † |
3652 Soros | 1981 TC3 | George Soros (György Soros), Hungarian-born American businessman and philosopher † ‡ ┼ |
3653 Klimishin | 1979 HF5 | Ivan Antonovich Klimishin, Russian astronomer † |
3654 AAS | 1949 QH1 | American Astronomical Society † |
3655 Eupraksia | 1978 SA3 | wife of prince Fedor of Ryazan, who lived in the 13th century, she preferred to kill herself to being taken prisoner by Mongol-Tatars † |
3656 Hemingway | 1978 QX | Ernest Hemingway, US writer † |
3657 Ermolova | 1978 ST6 | Maria Yermolova, Russian actress † |
3658 Feldman | 1982 TR | Paul D. Feldman, American astronomer, and Paul A. Feldman, Canadian radioastronomer † |
3659 Bellingshausen | 1969 TE2 | Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, Antarctic explorer, who in 1819–1821 lead the first Russian Antarctic expedition † |
3660 Lazarev | 1978 QX2 | Mikhail Petrovich Lazarev, Russian admiral † |
3661 Dolmatovskij | 1979 UY3 | Yevgeniy Aronovich Dolmatovsky, Soviet poet † |
3662 Dezhnev | 1980 RU2 | Semyon Dezhnyov, Russian explorer † |
3663 Tisserand | 1985 GK1 | Félix Tisserand, French astronomer* |
3664 Anneres | 4260 P-L | * |
3665 Fitzgerald | 1979 FE | Ella Fitzgerald, American jazz singer † |
3666 Holman | 1979 HP | Matthew J. Holman, American astronomer [MPC 34619] † |
3667 Anne-Marie | 1981 EF | * |
3668 Ilfpetrov | 1982 UM7 | Ilf and Petrov, Soviet writers † |
3669 Vertinskij | 1982 UO7 | Alexander Vertinsky, Russian actor, poet and composer † |
3670 Northcott | 1983 BN | Ruth Josephine Northcott, Canadian astronomer † |
3671 Dionysus | 1984 KD | * |
3672 Stevedberg | 1985 QQ | Stephen J. Edberg, American astronomer* |
3673 Levy | 1985 QS | David Levy, Canadian astronomer and author † |
3674 Erbisbühl | 1963 RH | * |
3675 Kemstach | 1982 YP1 | * |
3676 Hahn | 1984 GA | Otto Hahn, physicist* |
3677 Magnusson | 1984 QJ1 | * |
3678 Mongmanwai | 1966 BO | Mong Man Wai, Chinese businessman |
3679 Condruses | 1984 DT | Condruzes or Condruses, ancient inhabitants of what is now the Condroz, Belgium* |
3680 Sasha | 1987 MY | * |
3681 Boyan | 1974 QO2 | * |
3682 Welther | A923 NB | Barbara L. Welther* |
3683 Baumann | 1987 MA | Paul and Helene Baumann, German amateur astronomers † ‡ |
3684 Berry | 1983 AK | * |
3685 Derdenye | 1981 EH14 | * |
3686 Antoku | 1987 EB | Emperor Antoku, Japan |
3687 Dzus | A908 TC | * |
3688 Navajo | 1981 FD | * |
3689 Yeates | 1981 JJ2 | * |
3690 Larson | 1981 PM | * |
3691 Bede | 1982 FT | The Venerable Bede, English historian † |
3692 Rickman | 1982 HF1 | Hans Rickman, a planetary astronomer at Uppsala Observatory |
3693 Barringer | 1982 RU | * |
3694 Sharon | 1984 SH5 | * |
3695 Fiala | 1973 UU4 | Alan Fiala, American astronomer* |
3696 Herald | 1980 OF | * |
3697 Guyhurst | 1984 EV | Guy Hurst, British amateur astronomer* |
3698 Manning | 1984 UA2 | * |
3699 Milbourn | 1984 UC2 | * |
3700 Geowilliams | 1984 UL2 | George Williams, Australian geologist, discoverer of Acraman impact structure in South Australia |
3701–3800 | ||
3701 Purkyně | 1985 DW | Jan Evangelista Purkyně (Johannes Evangelists Purkinje), Czech anatomist, patriot, and physiologist † |
3702 Trubetskaya | 1970 NB | Ekaterina Ivanovna Trubetskaya, Russian princess, wife of a Decembrist † |
3703 Volkonskaya | 1978 PU3 | Mariya Nikolayevna Volkonskaya, Russian princess, wife of a Decembrist † |
3704 Gaoshiqi | 1981 YX1 | Gao Shi-Qi, the founder of science popularization in China † |
3705 Hotellasilla | 1984 ET1 | "Hotel La Silla" in Chile † |
3706 Sinnott | 1984 SE3 | * |
3707 Schröter | 1934 CC | Johann Hieronymus Schröter, German astronomer and selenographer* |
3708 – | 1974 FV1 | – |
3709 Polypoites | 1985 TL3 | Polypoites, mythical Greek warrior* |
3710 Bogoslovskij | 1978 RD6 | Nikita Bogoslovsky, Russian composer and writer † |
3711 Ellensburg | 1983 QD | * |
3712 Kraft | 1984 YC | * |
3713 Pieters | 1985 FA2 | * |
3714 Kenrussell | 1983 TT1 | Ken Russell, British film director* |
3715 Štohl | 1980 DS | Ján Štohl, Slovak astronomer † |
3716 Petzval | 1980 TG | József Miska Petzval, Hungarian engineer and mathematician † ‡ † |
3717 Thorenia | 1964 CG | * |
3718 Dunbar | 1978 VS10 | * |
3719 Karamzin | 1976 YO1 | Nikolay Karamzin, Russian historian † |
3720 Hokkaido | 1987 UR1 | Hokkaidō, Japan* |
3721 Widorn | 1982 TU | Thomas Widorn, Austrian astronomer* |
3722 Urata | 1927 UE | Takeshi Urata, Japanese asteroid hunter* |
3723 Voznesenskij | 1976 GK2 | Andrey Voznesensky, Russian poet † |
3724 Annenskij | 1979 YN8 | Innokenty Annensky, Russian poet and writer † |
3725 Valsecchi | 1981 EA11 | * |
3726 Johnadams | 1981 LJ | John Adams, American president* |
3727 Maxhell | 1981 PQ | Maximilian Hell (Miksa Hell), S.J., Slovak astronomer † ‡ † |
3728 IRAS | 1983 QF | The Infrared Astronomical Satellite [MPC 34619] † |
3729 Yangzhou | 1983 VP7 | Yangzhou, city in China † |
3730 Hurban | 1983 XM1 | Jozef Miloslav Hurban (1817–1888), Slovak poet, writer, journalist, editor, critic. |
3731 Hancock | 1984 DH1 | John Hancock, American politician* |
3732 Vávra | 1984 SR1 | Anton Alfred Vávra, father of the discoverer † |
3733 Yoshitomo | 1985 AF | Minamoto no Yoshitomo, early samurai |
3734 Waland | 9527 P-L | Robert L. Waland, Scottish optician who developed new techniques for making the optics of Schmidt telescopes* |
3735 Třeboň | 1983 XS | Třeboň, Czech Republic † |
3736 Rokoske | 1987 SY3 | * |
3737 Beckman | 1983 PA | * |
3738 Ots | 1977 QA1 | Georg Ots, Estonian opera singer* |
3739 Rem | 1977 RE2 | * |
3740 Menge | 1981 EM | * |
3741 Rogerburns | 1981 EL19 | Roger Burns (1937–1994), New Zealand mineralogist |
3742 Sunshine | 1981 EQ27 | * |
3743 Pauljaniczek | 1983 EW | Paul Janiczek, American astronomer [1] |
3744 Horn-d'Arturo | 1983 VE | Guido Horn d'Arturo, Italian astronomer* |
3745 Petaev | 1949 SF | * |
3746 Heyuan | 1964 TC1 | Heyuan, city in China † |
3747 Belinskij | 1975 VY5 | Vissarion Belinsky, Russian literary critic |
3748 Tatum | 1981 JQ | Jeremy B. Tatum, Canadian astronomer † |
3749 Balam | 1982 BG1 | David D. Balam, Canadian astronomer † |
3750 Ilizarov | 1982 TD1 | * |
3751 Kiang | 1983 NK | * |
3752 Camillo | 1985 PA | * |
3753 Cruithne | 1986 TO | Cruithne, ancient British tribe* |
3754 Kathleen | 1931 FM | * |
3755 Lecointe | 1950 SJ | Georges Lecointe, Belgian astronomer and explorer |
3756 Ruscannon | 1979 MV6 | Russell David Cannon, British astronomer* |
3757 – | 1982 XB | – |
3758 Karttunen | 1983 WP | Hannu Karttunen, Finnish astronomer* |
3759 Piironen | 1984 AP | Jukka Piironen, Finnish astronomer* |
3760 Poutanen | 1984 AQ | Markku Poutanen, Finnish astronomer and geodesist* |
3761 Romanskaya | 1936 OH | Sofia Vasil’evna Romanskaya, Russian astronomer † ‡ |
3762 Amaravella | 1976 QN1 | Amaravella group of Russian painters, they represented Russian cosmism style † |
3763 Qianxuesen | 1980 TA6 | Qian Xuesen* |
3764 Holmesacourt | 1980 TL15 | * |
3765 Texereau | 1982 SU1 | Jean Texereau, optical engineer in the optical laboratory at Paris Observatory and author of the classic How to Make a Telescope* |
3766 Junepatterson | 1983 BF | June Patterson? * |
3767 DiMaggio | 1986 LC | Joe DiMaggio, American baseball player [MPC 34619] |
3768 Monroe | 1937 RB | Marilyn Monroe, American actress [MPC 34619] |
3769 Arthurmiller | 1967 UV | Arthur Miller, American playwright, essayist, and author* |
3770 Nizami | 1974 QT1 | Nizami Ganjavi, Azerbaijani poet † |
3771 Alexejtolstoj | 1974 SB3 | Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy, Russian writer † |
3772 Piaf | 1982 UR7 | Édith Piaf, French singer † |
3773 Smithsonian | 1984 YY | Smithsonian Institution, American museum* |
3774 Megumi | 1987 YC | wife of discover |
3775 Ellenbeth | 1931 TC4 | * |
3776 Vartiovuori | 1938 GG | * |
3777 McCauley | 1981 JD2 | * |
3778 Regge | 1984 HK1 | * |
3779 Kieffer | 1985 JV1 | Hugh H. Kieffer and/or Susan Kieffer, American planetary scientists* |
3780 Maury | 1985 RL | Alain J. Maury, French astronomer † |
3781 Dufek | 1986 RG1 | Rear Admiral George J. Dufek, American Antarctic explorer † |
3782 Celle | 1986 TE | * |
3783 Morris | 1986 TW1 | * |
3784 Chopin | 1986 UL1 | Frédéric Chopin, Polish composer* |
3785 Kitami | 1986 WM | Kitami, Japan* |
3786 Yamada | 1988 AE | Sakao Yamada, Japanese engineer |
3787 Aivazovskij | 1977 RG7 | Ivan Aivazovsky, Russian painter † |
3788 Steyaert | 1986 QM3 | Christian Steyaert, Belgian amateur astronomer, president of the Belgian (Flemish) astronomical society Vereniging voor Sterrenkunde from 1988 to 2004 † |
3789 Zhongguo | 1928 UF | Chinese name for China* |
3790 Raywilson | 1937 UE | * |
3791 Marci | 1981 WV1 | Johannes Marcus Marci (Jan Marek Markù), Czech physician, physicist, astronomer, and natural philosopher † |
3792 Preston | 1985 FA | * |
3793 Leonteus | 1985 TE3 | Leonteus, mythical person related to Trojan War* |
3794 Sthenelos | 1985 TF3 | Sthenelos, mythical person related to Trojan War* |
3795 Nigel | 1986 GV1 | Nigel Henbest, British author, co-founder of Pioneer TV Productions † |
3796 Lene | 1986 XJ | * |
3797 Ching-Sung Yu | 1987 YL | Ching-Sung Yu, Chinese astronomer |
3798 de Jager | 2402 T-3 | Cornelis de Jager (Kees de Jager), Dutch astronomer † |
3799 Novgorod | 1979 SL9 | Novgorod, Russia † |
3800 Karayusuf | 1984 AB | * |
3801–3900 | ||
3801 Thrasymedes | 1985 VS | Thrasymedes, mythical person related to Trojan War* |
3802 Dornburg | 1986 PJ4 | * |
3803 Tuchkova | 1981 TP1 | Margarita Mikhailovna Tuchkova, Russian, founder of Spaso-Borodinsky monastery † |
3804 Drunina | 1969 TB2 | Yulia Drunina, Soviet poet † |
3805 Goldreich | 1981 DK3 | Peter Goldreich* |
3806 Tremaine | 1981 EW32 | Scott D. Tremaine, Canadian astronomer † |
3807 Pagels | 1981 SE1 | Heinz Rudolf Pagels* |
3808 Tempel | 1982 FQ2 | Ernst Tempel, astronomer* |
3809 Amici | 1984 FA | Giovanni Battista Amici |
3810 Aoraki | 1985 DX | * |
3811 Karma | 1953 TH | Karma, Hindu philosophy* |
3812 Lidaksum | 1965 AK1 | Dak-Sum Li, Chinese* |
3813 Fortov | 1970 QA1 | * |
3814 Hoshi-no-mura | 1981 JA | Job training school for disabled persons. "Hoshi no mura" is meaning "Star village" in Japanese |
3815 König | 1959 GG | * |
3816 Chugainov | 1975 VG9 | * |
3817 Lencarter | 1979 MK1 | Len Carter, of the British Interplanetary Society* |
3818 Gorlitsa | 1979 QL8 | * |
3819 Robinson | 1983 AR | * |
3820 Sauval | 1984 DV | Henri Sauval, French historian † |
3821 Sonet | 1985 RC3 | Jean Sonet, a Belgian Jesuit † |
3822 Segovia | 1988 DP1 | Andrés Segovia, guitarist* |
3823 Yorii | 1988 EC1 | Yorii, Saitama, Japan |
3824 Brendalee | 1929 TK | * |
3825 Nürnberg | 1967 UR | Nuremberg, a city in Germany † |
3826 Handel | 1973 UV5 | George Frideric Handel, composer* |
3827 Zdeněkhorský | 1986 VU | Zdeněk Horský, Czech historian-astronomer † |
3828 Hoshino | 1986 WC | Jiro Hoshino, Japanese amateur astronomer |
3829 Gunma | 1988 EM | Gunma, a prefecture of Japan † |
3830 Trelleborg | 1986 RL | * |
3831 Pettengill | 1986 TP2 | * |
3832 Shapiro | 1981 QJ | * |
3833 Calingasta | 1971 SC | * |
3834 Zappafrank | 1980 JE | Frank Zappa, American musician † |
3835 Korolenko | 1977 SD3 | Vladimir Korolenko, Russian writer † |
3836 Lem | 1979 SR9 | Stanisław Lem, Polish writer † |
3837 Carr | 1981 JU2 | * |
3838 Epona | 1986 WA | * |
3839 Bogaevskij | 1971 OU | Konstantin Bogaevsky, Russian painter † |
3840 Mimistrobell | 1980 TN4 | * |
3841 Dicicco | 1983 VG7 | Dennis DiCicco, editor of Sky & Telescope* |
3842 Harlansmith | 1985 FC1 | Harlan Smith, American astronomer* |
3843 OISCA | 1987 DM | * |
3844 Lujiaxi | 1966 BZ | Lu Jiaxi, Chinese physical chemist* |
3845 Neyachenko | 1979 SA10 | Ilya Isaakovich Neyachenko, Russian journalist and amateur astronomer † |
3846 Hazel | 1980 TK5 | * |
3847 Šindel | 1982 DY1 | Jan Ondřejův (Šindel), medieval Czech astronomer, mathematician, physician, and professor † |
3848 Analucia | 1982 FH3 | Ana Lucia Martins, friend of discoverer |
3849 Incidentia | 1984 FC | * |
3850 Peltier | 1986 TK2 | Leslie Peltier, American amateur astronomer* |
3851 Alhambra | 1986 UZ | Alhambra palace in Spain* |
3852 Glennford | 1987 DR6 | – |
3853 Haas | 1981 WG1 | * |
3854 George | 1983 EA | * |
3855 Pasasymphonia | 1986 NF1 | * |
3856 Lutskij | 1976 QX | Valery Konstantinovich Lutsky, Russian astronomer † |
3857 Cellino | 1984 CD1 | * |
3858 Dorchester | 1986 TG | * |
3859 Börngen | 1987 EW | Freimut Börngen, German astronomer* |
3860 Plovdiv | 1986 PM4 | Plovdiv, Bulgaria* |
3861 Lorenz | A910 FA | * |
3862 Agekian | 1972 KM | Tateos Artemyevich Agekian, Russian astrophysicist † |
3863 Gilyarovskij | 1978 SJ3 | Vladimir Gilyarovsky, a Russian writer and newspaper journalist |
3864 Søren | 1986 XF | * |
3865 Lindbloom | 1988 AY4 | George Lindbloom, artist, designer, writer, cartoonist, teacher, photographer and humorist † |
3866 Langley | 1988 BH4 | Samuel Pierpont Langley, an American astronomer, physicist, inventor of the bolometer and pioneer of aviation † |
3867 Shiretoko | 1988 HG | Shiretoko Peninsula, Japan |
3868 Mendoza | 4575 P-L | * |
3869 Norton | 1981 JE | Arthur Philip Norton (1876–1955), British amateur astronomer (Norton's Star Atlas)* |
3870 Mayré | 1988 CG3 | Daughter of the discoverer* |
3871 Reiz | 1982 DR2 | Anders Reiz, Danish astronomer* |
3872 Akirafujii | 1983 AV | Akira Fujii, Japanese astronomer |
3873 Roddy | 1984 WB | David J. Roddy (1932–2002), American astrogeologist, researcher of terrestrial impact craters* |
3874 Stuart | 1986 TJ1 | * |
3875 Staehle | 1988 KE | * |
3876 Quaide | 1988 KJ | * |
3877 Braes | 3108 P-L | Lucien Lucas Eduard Braes |
3878 Jyoumon | 1982 VR4 | Jōmon period, prehistoric Japan |
3879 Machar | 1983 QA | Josef Svatopluk Machar, Czech writer and poet † |
3880 Kaiserman | 1984 WK | Michael Kaiserman, American Aerospace Engineer, Engineering Fellow-Raytheon Corp |
3881 Doumergua | 1925 VF | * |
3882 Johncox | 1962 RN | John P. Cox (1926–1984), American astronomer, researcher into variable stars* |
3883 Verbano | 1972 RQ | * |
3884 Alferov | 1977 EM1 | Zhores Ivanovich Alferov, Russian physicist † |
3885 Bogorodskij | 1979 HG5 | * |
3886 Shcherbakovia | 1981 RU3 | * |
3887 Gerstner | 1985 QX | František Josef Gerstner and his son František Antonín Gerstner, Czech physicist and railway engineers † |
3888 Hoyt | 1984 FO | William Graves Hoyt, latterly Research Associate at Lowell Observatory, historian of science* |
3889 Menshikov | 1972 RT3 | * |
3890 Bunin | 1976 YU5 | * |
3891 Werner | 1981 EY31 | * |
3892 Dezsö | 1941 HD | Lóránt Dezsõ, Hungarian astronomer † ‡ |
3893 DeLaeter | 1980 FG12 | John DeLaeter, retired professor at Curtin University, Western Australia † |
3894 Williamcooke | 1980 PQ2 | William Cooke* |
3895 Earhart | 1987 DE | Amelia Earhart, aviator* |
3896 Pordenone | 1987 WB | * |
3897 Louhi | 1942 RT | * |
3898 Curlewis | 1981 SF9 | Harold Curlewis, government astronomer for Western Australia during 1912–1940 and second director of the Perth Observatory † |
3899 Wichterle | 1982 SN1 | Otto Wichterle, Czech chemist, inventor of the contact lens † |
3900 Knežević | 1985 RK | * |
3901–4000 | ||
3901 Nanjingdaxue | 1958 GQ | Nanjing University* |
3902 Yoritomo | 1986 AL | Minamoto no Yoritomo, founder of the Kamakura shogunate, Japan |
3903 Kliment Ohridski | 1987 SV2 | Kliment Ohridski, philosopher* |
3904 Honda | 1988 DQ | Minoru Honda, Japanese astronomer |
3905 Doppler | 1984 QO | Christian Doppler, Austrian mathematician and physicist † |
3906 Chao | 1987 KE1 | Edward C. T. Chao, American geologist |
3907 Kilmartin | A904 PC | Pamela M. Kilmartin, New Zealand astronomer* |
3908 Nyx | 1980 PA | Nyx, Greek goddess* |
3909 Gladys | 1988 JD1 | * |
3910 Liszt | 1988 SF | Franz Liszt, Hungarian pianist and composer † ‡ |
3911 Otomo | 1940 QB | Satoru Otomo, Japanese astronomer |
3912 Troja | 1988 SG | Troy, ancient legendary city* |
3913 Chemin | 1986 XO2 | * |
3914 Kotogahama | 1987 SE | Kotogahama, beach in Geisei, Japan* |
3915 Fukushima | 1988 PA1 | Hisao Fukushima, Japanese astronomer |
3916 Maeva | 1981 QA3 | Maeva d'Alloy d'Hocquincourt Vitry |
3917 Franz Schubert | 1961 CX | Franz Schubert, composer* |
3918 Brel | 1988 PE1 | Jacques Brel, Belgian songwriter and performer* |
3919 Maryanning | 1984 DS | Mary Anning, English fossil hunter [MPC 34619] |
3920 Aubignan | 1948 WF | * |
3921 Klement'ev | 1971 OH | Zahar Ivanovich Klementyev, Russian mathematician † |
3922 Heather | 1971 SP3 | Heather Couper, a British astronomer † |
3923 Radzievskij | 1976 SN3 | Vladimir Vyacheslavovich Radzievskii, Russian astronomer † ‡ |
3924 Birch | 1977 CU | * |
3925 Tret'yakov | 1977 SS2 | Pavel Tretyakov and his brother Sergei Mikhailovich Tretyakov (1834–1892), Russian art collectors † |
3926 Ramirez | 1978 VQ3 | * |
3927 Feliciaplatt | 1981 JA2 | Felicia Platt, mother of the discoverer [MPC 25443] |
3928 Randa | 1981 PG | * |
3929 Carmelmaria | 1981 WG9 | Carmel Maria Borg, secretary at the Perth Observatory and administrative assistant † |
3930 Vasilev | 1982 UV10 | Konstantin Vasilyev, Russian painter † |
3931 Batten | 1984 EN | Alan H. Batten, Canadian astronomer † |
3932 Edshay | 1984 SC5 | Edwin L. Shay, educator |
3933 Portugal | 1986 EN4 | Portugal † |
3934 Tove | 1987 DF1 | * |
3935 Toatenmongakkai | 1987 PB | Japanese for Oriental Astronomical Association* |
3936 Elst | 2321 T-3 | Eric Walter Elst, astronomer † |
3937 Bretagnon | 1932 EO | * |
3938 Chapront | 1949 PL | * |
3939 Huruhata | 1953 GO | Masaaki Huruhata, Japanese astronomer |
3940 Larion | 1973 FE1 | Larisa Ivanovna Golubkina, Russian actress † |
3941 Haydn | 1973 UU5 | Joseph Haydn, Austrian composer* |
3942 Churivannia | 1977 RH7 | Ivan Ivanovich Churyumov (1907–1942) Soviet soldier, and Ivan Ivanovich Churyumov (1929–1988), Soviet philosopher and poet † |
3943 Silbermann | 1981 RG1 | * |
3944 Halliday | 1981 WP1 | Ian Halliday, Canadian astronomer † |
3945 Gerasimenko | 1982 PL | Svetlana Ivanovna Gerasimenko Soviet comets researcher † |
3946 Shor | 1983 EL2 | Viktor Abramovich Shor, Soviet minor planet researcher † |
3947 Swedenborg | 1983 XD | Emanuel Swedenborg, Swedish philosopher* |
3948 Bohr | 1985 RF | Niels Henrik David Bohr, Danish physicist* |
3949 Mach | 1985 UL | Ernst Mach, Austrian-Czech physicist and philosopher † |
3950 Yoshida | 1986 CH | Tougo Yoshida, Japanese toponymist |
3951 Zichichi | 1986 CK1 | Antonino Zichichi, Italian astrophysicist* |
3952 Russellmark | 1986 EM2 | Russell Mark Group has assisted Minor Planet Center with editing asteroid citations [MPC 34619] |
3953 Perth | 1986 VB6 | * |
3954 Mendelssohn | 1987 HU | Felix Mendelssohn, German composer* |
3955 Bruckner | 1988 RF3 | Anton Bruckner, Austrian composer* |
3956 Caspar | 1988 VL1 | * |
3957 Sugie | 1933 OD | Atsushi Sugie, Japanese astronomer* |
3958 Komendantov | 1953 TC | Nikolaj Vasil'evich Komendantov, Russian astronomer † |
3959 Irwin | 1954 UN2 | * |
3960 Chaliubieju | 1955 BG | Cha Liubieju, a friend of the discoverer † |
3961 Arthurcox | 1962 OB | * |
3962 Valyaev | 1967 CC | * |
3963 Paradzhanov | 1969 TP2 | * |
3964 Danilevskij | 1974 RG1 | * |
3965 Konopleva | 1975 VA9 | * |
3966 Cherednichenko | 1976 SD3 | * |
3967 Shekhtelia | 1976 YW2 | * |
3968 Koptelov | 1978 TU5 | * |
3969 Rossi | 1978 TQ8 | Karl Ivanovich Rossi (Carlo Rossi), Italian-Russian architect † |
3970 Herran | 1979 ME9 | Jose Antonio Ruiz de la Herran Villagomez, technical advisor of the Museum Universum in Mexico City † |
3971 Voronikhin | 1979 YM8 | * |
3972 Richard | 1981 JD3 | * |
3973 Ogilvie | 1981 UC1 | Robert E. Ogilvie, professor of metallurgy at MIT and a researcher at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts † |
3974 Verveer | 1982 FS | Arie Verveer, Dutch-born astronomer, Director of Perth Observatory in Western Australia † |
3975 Verdi | 1982 UR3 | Giuseppe Verdi, Italian composer* |
3976 Lise | 1983 JM | * |
3977 Maxine | 1983 LM | Maxine Shoemaker Heath, American entomologist [8] |
3978 Klepešta | 1983 VP1 | Josef Klepešta, Czech astronomer † |
3979 Brorsen | 1983 VV1 | Theodor Brorsen, Danish astronomer † |
3980 Hviezdoslav | 1983 XU | Pavol Országh Hviezdoslav, Slovak poet † |
3981 Stodola | 1984 BL | Aurel Stodola, Slovak engineer, physicist, and inventor † |
3982 Kastel | 1984 JP1 | Galina Richardovna Kastel, Soviet comets and minor planets researcher † |
3983 Sakiko | 1984 SX | Sakiko Nakano, sister of Japanese astronomer Syuichi Nakano † |
3984 Chacos | 1984 SB6 | Albert Anthony Chacos, American space engineer † |
3985 Raybatson | 1985 CX | Raymond M. Batson, American planetary geologist* |
3986 Rozhkovskij | 1985 SF2 | Dmitry Aleksandrovich Rozhkovsky, Soviet astronomer † |
3987 Wujek | 1986 EL1 | * |
3988 – | 1986 LA | – |
3989 Odin | 1986 RM | Odin, Norse god* |
3990 Heimdal | 1987 SO3 | Heimdall, Norse god* |
3991 Basilevsky | 1987 SW3 | Aleksandr T. Basilevskii, Soviet planetary geologist † |
3992 Wagner | 1987 SA7 | Richard Wagner, German composer, music theorist, and essayist* |
3993 Šorm | 1988 VV5 | František Šorm, Czech scientist, president of the Czechoslovak academy of Sciences during the International Geophysical Year, founder of the Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry in Prague † |
3994 Ayashi | 1988 XF | Ayashi, a district of Sendai, Japan |
3995 Sakaino | 1988 XM | Teruo Sakaino, a glass and ceramics chemist † |
3996 Fugaku | 1988 XG1 | One of ancient names for Mount Fuji in Japan [MPC 34619] |
3997 Taga | 1988 XP1 | Taga, Shiga, Japan |
3998 Tezuka | 1989 AB | Osamu Tezuka, Japanese manga artist |
3999 Aristarchus | 1989 AL | Aristarchus of Samos, Ancient Greek astronomer and mathematician* |
4000 Hipparchus | 1989 AV | Hipparchus, Ancient Greek scientist* |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "The USNO Asteroid Connection" (PDF). The USNO Transit. April–May 2009. Retrieved 2014-09-04.
- ↑ "(3202) Graff = A908 AA = 1981 ES13". Minor Planets Center. Retrieved 17 August 2015.
- ↑ http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/iau/lists/NumberedMPs000001.html
- ↑ http://www.aavso.org/special-recognitions
- ↑ http://www.boulder.swri.edu/~ptamblyn/
- ↑ http://www.psi.edu/press/archives/2010071210.html
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books?id=aeAg1X7afOoC&pg=PA281
- ↑ Dictionary of Minor Planet Names 2007, p 339
Preceded by 2,001–3,000 |
Meanings of minor planet names List of minor planets: 3,001–4,000 |
Succeeded by 4,001–5,000 |
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