Meanings of minor planet names: 6001–6500
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 Meanings that do not quote a reference (the "†" links) are tentative.
Minor planets not yet given a name have not been included in this list.
Name | Provisional Designation | Source of Name |
---|---|---|
6001–6100 | ||
6001 Thales | 1988 CP2 | Thales of Miletus, Ancient Greek philosopher † ‡ |
6007 Billevans | 1990 BE2 | William John ("Bill") Evans, American jazz pianist † |
6009 Yuzuruyoshii | 1990 FQ1 | Yuzuru Yoshii, director of the Institute of Astronomy, University of Tokyo † |
6010 Lyzenga | 1990 OE | Gregory Allen Lyzenga, American geophysicist, Satellite Geodesy and Geodynamics Systems Group, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and, Physics Department, Harvey Mudd College* |
6011 Tozzi | 1990 QU5 | Gian Paolo Tozzi, Italian astronomer or Paolo Tozzi, Italian astronomer or Andrea Tozzi, Italian astronomer* |
6012 Williammurdoch | 1990 SK4 | William Murdoch (1754-1839), a Scottish engineer. † |
6013 Andanike | 1991 OZ | Andrew S., David S., Nicholas J., and Kevin M. Martinez, grandsons of the discoverer † |
6014 Chribrenmark | 1991 PO10 | Christopher W., Brendan J., and Mark E. Moeller, grandsons of the discoverer † |
6015 Paularego | 1991 PR10 | Paula Rego, Luso-British graphic artist † |
6019 Telford | 1991 RO6 | Thomas Telford (1757-1834), a Scottish civil engineer and famed builder of roads, canals, bridges, tunnels and harbors. † |
6020 Miyamoto | 1991 SL1 | Yukio Miyamoto, Japanese astronomer, director of Seiwa Kougen Observatory* |
6022 Jyuro | 1992 UB4 | Juro Kobayashi, Japanese amateur astronomer |
6023 Tsuyashima | 1992 UQ4 | Takaaki Tsuyashima, Japanese astronomer, director of Kumamoto Kenmin Observatory |
6024 Ochanomizu | 1992 UT4 | Ochanomizu, a neighborhood in Tokyo, Japan |
6025 Naotosato | 1992 YA3 | Naoto Sato (b. 1953), active amateur astronomer and junior high school science teacher. † |
6026 Xenophanes | 1993 BA8 | Xenophanes, Ancient Greek philosopher † |
6029 Edithrand | 1948 AG | * |
6030 Zolensky | 1981 EG36 | Michael Ewing Zolensky, American meteoriticist, Associate Curator for Interplanetary Dust and Hardware Returned from Space, Co-investigator of the STARDUST Discovery Mission, and member of the science team of the MUSES-C Asteroid Sample Return Mission at NASA Johnson Space Center † ‡ |
6031 Ryokan | 1982 BQ4 | Ryōkan, Japanese Zen monk* |
6032 Nobel | 1983 PY | Alfred Bernhard Nobel, Swedish chemist, humanist and philanthropist, founder of the Nobel prize † |
6035 Citlaltépetl | 1987 OR | Citlaltépetl, a dormant volcano and the highest mountain (5636 m) in Mexico and lies near to the city of Orizaba. † |
6036 Weinberg | 1988 CV3 | Steven Weinberg, American physicist and Nobelist † ‡ |
6039 Parmenides | 1989 RS | Parmenides, Ancient Greek philosopher † |
6041 Juterkilian | 1990 KL | Klas Juter, Swedish architect and photographer, and Danuta Kilian, Polish artist. † |
6042 Cheshirecat | 1990 WW2 | The Cheshire cat, a cat appearing in Lewis Carroll's famous fairy tale Alice in Wonderland. Its unique characteristic is its laughing voice that lingers after the cat fades away. † |
6043 Aurochs | 1991 RK2 | The aurochs, Bos primigenius † |
6044 Hammer-Purgstall | 1991 RW4 | Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall, Austrian orientalist* |
6049 Toda | 1991 VP | Kōjun? Toda, Japanese astronomer* |
6050 Miwablock | 1992 AE | Miwa Block, application systems analyst at the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory of the University of Arizona and member of the Spacewatch team. † |
6051 Anaximenes | 1992 BX1 | Anaximenes of Miletus, Ancient Greek philosopher † |
6052 Junichi | 1992 CE1 | Junichi Watanabe, Japanese astronomer |
6054 Ghiberti | 4019 P-L | Lorenzo Ghiberti, Italian sculptor* |
6055 Brunelleschi | 2158 T-3 | Filippo Brunelleschi, Florentine architect* |
6056 Donatello | 2318 T-3 | Donatello (Donato di Niccolò di Betto Bardi), Florentine artist and sculptor* |
6057 Robbia | 5182 T-3 | Luca della Robbia, Italian sculptor* |
6059 Diefenbach | 1979 TA | Karl Wilhelm Diefenbach (1851–1913), a German painter and philosopher. † |
6060 Doudleby | 1980 DX | Doudleby, Bohemia, Czech Republic † |
6062 Vespa | 1983 JQ | named after the Vespa* |
6063 Jason | 1984 KB | Jason, Greek mythological hero* |
6064 Holašovice | 1987 HE1 | Holašovice, Bohemia, Czech Republic † |
6065 Chesneau | 1987 OC | Olivier Chesneau (b. 1972), a French astronomer. † |
6066 Hendricks | 1987 SZ3 | * |
6068 Brandenburg | 1990 TJ2 | Brandenburg, Germany* |
6069 Cevolani | 1991 PW17 | Giordano Cevolani, Italian geophysicist † |
6070 Rheinland | 1991 XO1 | Rhineland, Germany* |
6071 Sakitama | 1992 AS1 | Sakitama, a region of Gyoda city and from which Saitama prefecture takes its name, is known for its burial mounds, constructed from clay and rocks between the fourth and seventh centuries. † |
6072 Hooghoudt | 1280 T-1 | Bernard Hooghoudt, developer of the Dutch radio telescopes † |
6074 Bechtereva | 1968 QE | Natalya Petrovna Bekhtereva, Russian physiologist † |
6075 Zajtsev | 1976 GH2 | Aleksandr Zaitsev, Russian radio engineer and astronomer † |
6076 Plavec | 1980 CR | Miroslav Plavec (Mirek Plavec), Czech astronomer † |
6077 Messner | 1980 TM | Reinhold Messner, Italian mountaineer † |
6078 Burt | 1980 TC5 | * |
6079 Gerokurat | 1981 DG3 | Gero Kurat, Austrian curator of the meteorite collection of the Natural History Museum in Vienna, and president of the Meteoritical Society † |
6080 Lugmair | 1981 EY26 | Günter Lugmair, German cosmochemist and meteoriticist † |
6081 Cloutis | 1981 EE35 | Edward Cloutis, Canadian physicist † ‡ |
6082 Timiryazev | 1982 UH8 | Kliment Arkad'evich Timiryazev, Russian botanist* |
6083 Janeirabloom | 1984 SQ2 | Jane Ira Bloom, American soprano saxophonist and jazz composer † |
6084 Bascom | 1985 CT | Florence Bascom, American geologist † |
6085 Fraethi | 1987 SN3 | Frede Pedersen, father of one of the discoverers; Frede, an old Danish name meaning peace, comes from the old Nordic name Fraethi. † |
6087 Lupo | 1988 FK | Bob Lupo, Boston-born Arizona restaurateur † |
6088 Hoshigakubo | 1988 UH | Hoshigakubo, Niyodo, Kōchi, Japan. The name refers to a section of low ground at Choja, a mountainous place in the western part of Kochi prefecture. Legend has it that a meteorite fell there in olden times. Now there is a pond 20 meters across. † |
6089 Izumi | 1989 AF1 | Izumi-ku, Sendai, Japan |
6091 Mitsuru | 1990 DA1 | Mitsuru Soma, Japanese astronomer |
6092 Johnmason | 1990 MN | John W. Mason (b. 1954) has contributed to research on comets and meteors and to the popularization of astronomy. He was president of the British Astronomical Association during 1993-1995. † |
6093 Makoto | 1990 QP5 | Makoto Yoshikawa, Japanese astronomer |
6094 Hisako | 1990 VQ1 | Hisako Hioki (b. 1929), the mother of the discoverer and an expert seamstress. † |
6097 Koishikawa | 1991 UK2 | Masahiro Koishikawa, Japanese amateur astronomer |
6099 Saarland | 1991 UH4 | Saarland, Germany* |
6100 Kunitomoikkansai | 1991 VK4 | Named in memory of Ikkansai Kunitomo (1778-1840). Born into a family of famous gun makers in the Edo period in Japan, he made several Gregorian reflecting telescopes entirely of his own design and observed the sun, moon and planets. For 14 months during 1835-1836 he made a continuous series of observations of sunspots. † |
6101–6200 | ||
6102 Visby | 1993 FQ25 | Visby, Sweden † |
6104 Takao | 1993 HZ | Takao Saito, Japanese geophysicist |
6105 Verrocchio | 4580 P-L | Andrea del Verrocchio, Florentine sculptor* |
6106 Stoss | 6564 P-L | Veit Stoss, German sculptor and wood-carver |
6107 Osterbrock | 1948 AF | Donald Edward Osterbrock, American astrophysicist* |
6108 Glebov | 1971 QN | * |
6109 Balseiro | 1975 QC | José Antonio Balseiro, 20th-century Argentine nuclear physicist † |
6110 Kazak | 1978 NQ1 | * |
6111 Davemckay | 1979 SP13 | David Stewart McKay, American lunar geologist and meteoriticist † |
6112 Ludolfschultz | 1981 DB1 | Ludolf Schultz, German cosmochemist and meteoriticist † |
6113 Tsap | 1982 SX5 | * |
6115 Martinduncan | 1984 SR2 | Martin J. Duncan, Canadian astronomer † |
6116 Still | 1984 UB3 | Martin David Still, British astronomer* |
6119 Hjorth | 1986 XH | Jens Hjorth, Danish astrophysicist † |
6120 Anhalt | 1987 QR | * |
6121 Plachinda | 1987 RU3 | * |
6122 Henrard | 1987 SW1 | Jacques Henrard, Belgian astronomer (celestial mechanics)* |
6123 Aristoteles | 1987 SH2 | Aristotle, Ancient Greek philosopher † ‡ |
6124 Mecklenburg | 1987 SL10 | * |
6127 Hetherington | 1989 HD | Norriss Swigart Hetherington, American historian of astronomy* |
6128 Lasorda | 1989 LA | Tommy Lasorda, former manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers † |
6129 Demokritos | 1989 RB2 | Democritus, Ancient Greek philosopher † |
6130 Hutton | 1989 SL5 | James Hutton, 18th-century Scottish founder of modern geology † |
6131 Towen | 1990 OO3 | Tobias Owen, American astronomer* |
6132 Danielson | 1990 QY3 | * |
6135 Billowen | 1990 RD9 | William Mann Owen, American astronomer* |
6136 Gryphon | 1990 YH | * |
6137 Johnfletcher | 1991 BY | John Fletcher, British amateur astronomer and public educator † |
6139 Naomi | 1992 AD1 | Naomi Sugie, wife of discover |
6140 Kubokawa | 1992 AT1 | Kazuo Kubokawa, Japanese astronomer |
6141 Durda | 1992 YC3 | Daniel David Durda, American astronomer † |
6143 Pythagoras | 1993 JV | Pythagoras, Ancient Greek philosopher and mathematician † |
6144 Kondojiro | 1994 EQ3 | Jiro Kondo, Japanese Egyptologist and amateur astronomer † |
6145 Riemenschneider | 2630 P-L | Tilman Riemenschneider, German sculptor* |
6146 Adamkrafft | 3262 T-2 | Adam Krafft, German sculptor* |
6147 Straub | 1081 T-3 | Johann Baptist Straub, German sculptor* |
6148 Ignazgünther | 5119 T-3 | Ignaz Günther, German sculptor* |
6149 Pelčák | 1979 SS | Oldřich Pelčák, Czech astronaut-candidate † |
6150 Neukum | 1980 FR1 | Gerhard Neukum, German astronomer, professor at Freie Universität, Berlin † |
6151 Viget | 1987 WF | * |
6152 Empedocles | 1989 GB3 | Empedocles, Ancient Greek philosopher † |
6153 Hershey | 1990 OB | John Landis Hershey, American astronomer* |
6154 Stevesynnott | 1990 QP1 | Stephen P. Synnott, American astronomer* |
6155 Yokosugano | 1990 VY2 | Yōko Sugano, wife of Matsuo Sugano |
6156 Dall | 1991 AF1 | * |
6157 Prey | 1991 RX2 | Alois Prey, Austrian astronomer or Adalbert Prey, Austrian astronomer* |
6160 Minakata | 1993 JF | Kumagusu Minakata, Japanese author and naturalist |
6161 Vojno-Yasenetsky | 1971 TY2 | Valentin Voino-Yasenetsky (Archbishop Luka), Ukrainian surgeon and theologian* |
6162 Prokhorov | 1973 SR6 | Yurij Vasil'evich Prokhorov, Russian mathematician* |
6163 Reimers | 1977 FT | Dieter Reimers, German astronomer* |
6164 Gerhardmüller | 1977 RF2 | * |
6165 Frolova | 1978 PD3 | * |
6166 Univsima | 1978 SP4 | Simferopol State University* |
6167 Narmanskij | 1979 QB10 | V. Ya. Narmanskii, Ukrainian researcher in biorhythms and space physics* |
6169 Sashakrot | 1981 EX4 | Alexander (Sasha) Krot, cosmochemist and meteoriticist † |
6170 Levasseur | 1981 GP | Pierre Émile Levasseur, French economist* |
6172 Prokofeana | 1982 TX | * |
6173 Jimwestphal | 1983 AD | James A. (Jim) Westphal, American astronomer, at one time Director of Palomar Observatory* |
6174 Polybius | 1983 TR2 | Polybius, Ancient Greek historian* |
6175 Cori | 1983 XW | Carl Ferdinand and Gerty Theresa Cori (née Radnitz), husband and wife Austro-Hungarian-American biochemists † |
6176 Horrigan | 1985 BH | Barbara Llewellyn Horrigan, American member of the Arlington Friends of the Drama (Massachusetts), actress, director, and set and costume designer † ‡ |
6179 Brett | 1986 EN | Robin Brett, American astronomer* |
6180 Bystritskaya | 1986 PX4 | * |
6181 Bobweber | 1986 RW | Robert ("Bob") Weber, 20th-century American physicist and astronomer, team leader of the Deep Space Satellite Tracking Network, and co-developer of the LINEAR project † |
6182 Katygord | 1987 SC4 | * |
6183 Viscome | 1987 SF7 | George R. Viscome, American broadcast technician and astrometrist † |
6184 Nordlund | 1987 UQ3 | Aake Nordlund, Danish astrophysicist † |
6186 Zenon | 1988 CC2 | Zenon, Ancient Greek philosopher and mathematician † |
6188 Robertpepin | 1988 SW2 | Robert Pepin, American meteoriticist † |
6189 Völk | 1989 EY2 | Elisabeth Völk, secretary of ESO headquarters † ‡ |
6190 Rennes | 1989 TJ1 | Rennes, France* |
6191 Eades | 1989 WN1 | * |
6193 Manabe | 1990 QC1 | Yoshinosuke or Ryōnosuke Manabe, Japanese astronomer* |
6194 Denali | 1990 TN | * |
6195 Nukariya | 1990 VL2 | Motoi Nukariya, Japanese astronomer |
6198 Shirakawa | 1992 AF1 | Shirakawa, Fukushima, Japan |
6199 Yoshiokayayoi | 1992 BK1 | Yayoi Yoshioka, Japanese physician and women's rights activist |
6200 Hachinohe | 1993 HL | Akio Hachinohe, Japanese amateur astronomer |
6201–6300 | ||
6201 Ichiroshimizu | 1993 HY | Ichiro Shimizu, Japanese astronomer † |
6202 Georgemiley | 3332 T-1 | George K. Miley, American astronomer* |
6203 Lyubamoroz | 1981 EC23 | Lyuba V. Moroz, Russian planetary scientist † |
6204 MacKenzie | 1981 JB3 | Norman MacKenzie, Canadian scholar † |
6205 Menottigalli | 1983 OD | Menotti Galli, Italian physicist † |
6206 Corradolamberti | 1985 TB1 | Corrado Lamberti, Italian astronomer* |
6207 Bourvil | 1988 BV | Bourvil (André Zacharie Raimbourg), French actor and singer † |
6208 Wakata | 1988 XT | Koichi Wakata, Japanese astronaut |
6209 Schwaben | 1990 TF4 | Samuel Heinrich Schwabe, German solar astronomer †* |
6210 Hyunseop | 1991 AX1 | Seo Hyun-seop, Korean diplomat † |
6211 Tsubame | 1991 DO | Tsubame, Japanese former express train running from Tokyo to Osaka or Kobe |
6213 Zwiers | 2196 P-L | Hendrik Jan Zwiers, Dutch astronomer † |
6214 Mikhailgrinev | 1971 SN2 | * |
6216 San Jose | 1975 SJ | San Jose, California † |
6218 Mizushima | 1977 EG7 | A town of Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan |
6219 Demalia | 1978 PX2 | * |
6220 Stepanmakarov | 1978 SN7 | Stepan Osipovich Makarov, Russian vice-admiral and oceanographer* |
6221 Ducentesima | 1980 GO | Latin for "200", for 200th asteroid discovered at Kleť Observatory † |
6223 Dahl | 1980 RD1 | Roald Dahl, British author † |
6224 El Goresy | 1981 EK8 | Ahmed El Goresy, Egyptian mineralogist † † |
6225 Hiroko | 1981 EK12 | Hiroko Nagahara, Japanese meteoriticist † |
6226 Paulwarren | 1981 EY18 | Paul Warren, American research geochemist † |
6227 Alanrubin | 1981 EQ42 | Alan Rubin, American research geochemist † |
6228 Yonezawa | 1982 BA | Yonezawa, Yamagata, Japan |
6229 Tursachan | 1983 VN7 | Gaelic for "Standing Stones" (1997 Flagstaff Festival of Science asteroid naming contest winner) † |
6231 Hundertwasser | 1985 FH | Friedensreich Hundertwasser (Friedrich Stowasser), Austrian artist † |
6232 Zubitskia | 1985 SJ3 | * |
6233 Kimura | 1986 CG | Hisashi Kimura, Japanese astronomer* |
6234 Sheilawolfman | 1986 SF | Sheila Wolfman (née Sala Fajerman), Polish child survivor of the holocaust, pictured in Martin Gilbert's The Boys † |
6235 Burney | 1987 VB | Venetia Phair, née Burney, English woman who, at age 11, suggested the name Pluto for the "ninth planet" † |
6236 Mallard | 1988 WF | LNER Class A4 4468 Mallard, British steam locomotive |
6237 Chikushi | 1989 CV | Chikuzen and Chikugo Province, former name of Fukuoka prefecture, Japan † |
6239 Minos | 1989 QF | Minos, mythological Cretan king* |
6240 Lucretius Carus | 1989 SL1 | Titus Lucretius Carus, Roman poet and philosopher † |
6241 Galante | 1989 TG | * |
6243 Yoder | 1990 OT3 | Charles Finney Yoder, American astronomer* |
6244 Okamoto | 1990 QF | Hiroshi Okamoto, Japanese primary school teacher of discoverer † |
6245 Ikufumi | 1990 SO4 | Ikufumi Makino, Japanese telecommunications systems engineer and amateur astronomer † |
6246 Komurotoru | 1990 VX2 | Toru Komuro, Japanese sculptor* |
6247 Amanogawa | 1990 WY3 | Amanogawa river, Hokkaidō, Japan (In Japanese, "Amanogawa" means also "Milky Way") |
6249 Jennifer | 1991 JF1 | * |
6250 Saekohayashi | 1991 VX1 | Saeko S. Hayashi (b. 1958) is an associate professor at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. † |
6251 Setsuko | 1992 DB | Setsuko Akiyama, wife of one of discoverers |
6252 Montevideo | 1992 EV11 | Montevideo, Uruguay, birthplace of Gonzalo Tancredi, one of the discoverers † |
6255 Kuma | 1994 XT | Kuma, Aichi, Japan |
6256 Canova | 4063 P-L | Antonio Canova, Italian sculptor* |
6257 Thorvaldsen | 4098 T-1 | Bertel Thorvaldsen, Danish sculptor* |
6258 Rodin | 3070 T-2 | Auguste Rodin, French sculptor †* |
6259 Maillol | 3236 T-2 | Aristide Maillol, French sculptor* |
6260 Kelsey | 1949 PN | Frances Oldham Kelsey, Canadian-American pharmacologist † |
6261 Chione | 1976 WC | * |
6262 Javid | 1978 RZ | * |
6266 Letzel | 1986 TB3 | Jan Letzel, Czech architect † |
6267 Rozhen | 1987 SO9 | The National Astronomical Observatory of Bulgaria on Mt Rozhen* |
6268 Versailles | 1990 SS5 | Versailles, France † |
6269 Kawasaki | 1990 UJ | Shun'ichi Kawasaki, Japanese astronomer* |
6271 Farmer | 1991 NF | * |
6273 Kiruna | 1992 ER31 | Kiruna, northernmost city of Sweden † |
6274 Taizaburo | 1992 FV | Taizaburo Koyama, Japanese amateur astronomer* |
6275 Kiryu | 1993 VQ | Kiryū, Gunma, Japan |
6276 Kurohone | 1994 AB | Kurohone, village in Seta District, Gunma, Japan* |
6278 Ametkhan | 1971 TF | Amet Khan Sultan, Tatar air ace of World War II* |
6280 Sicardy | 1980 RJ | * |
6281 Strnad | 1980 SD | Antonín Strnad, Czech astronomer † |
6282 Edwelda | 1980 TS4 | Edwin Aguirre and Imelda Joson, Filipino associate editor and photo editor, respectively, at Sky & Telescope magazine † ‡ + |
6284 Borisivanov | 1981 EM19 | Boris Ivanov, Russian geophysicist † |
6285 Ingram | 1981 EA26 | Vernon Ingram, American biologist, and his wife Elizabeth (Beth) Ingram, former Ashdown House housemasters at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology † |
6287 Lenham | 1984 AR | Alan Pennell Lenham, British amateur astronomer* |
6289 Lanusei | 1984 HP1 | Lanusei, a town in Sardinia, Italy. † |
6291 Renzetti | 1985 TM1 | Nicholas A. Renzetti, physicist, at one time with the Deep Space Network* |
6293 Oberpfalz | 1987 WV1 | * |
6294 Czerny | 1988 CX1 | Karl Czerny, Austrian composer and piano teacher † |
6295 Schmoll | 1988 CF3 | Antoine Schmoll, German piano teacher † |
6296 Cleveland | 1988 NC | Cleveland, Ohio* |
6298 Sawaoka | 1988 XC | Akira Sawaoka (b. 1938), a Japanese scientist who synthesized a new type of polycrystalline diamond by a new shock-wave consolidation technique.. † |
6299 Reizoutoyoko | 1988 XQ1 | Reizou and Toyoko Mori, parents of one of discoverers |
6300 Hosamu | 1988 YB | Osamu Hioki, friend of discoverers |
6301–6400 | ||
6302 Tengukogen | 1989 CF | Tengu Highland, mountain in Shikoku Island, Japan † |
6304 Josephus Flavius | 1989 GT3 | Josephus Bar Mattheus, Jewish historian † |
6305 Helgoland | 1989 GE8 | Heligoland, Germany. † |
6306 Nishimura | 1989 UL3 | Yūji Nishimura, president of Nishimura Mfg. Co. |
6307 Maiztegui | 1989 WL7 | Alberto Maiztegui, Argentinian author and science educator † |
6308 Ebisuzaki | 1990 BK | Toshikazu Ebisuzaki, Japanese astronomer. † |
6309 Elsschot | 1990 EM3 | Willem Elsschot, pseudonym of Alfons de Ridder, Flemish writer † |
6310 Jankonke | 1990 KK | * |
6311 Porubčan | 1990 RQ2 | Vladimír Porubčan, Slovak astronomer. † |
6312 Robheinlein | 1990 RH4 | Robert A. Heinlein, American science fiction author † |
6317 Dreyfus | 1990 UP3 | Dreyfus affair † |
6318 Cronkite | 1990 WA | Walter Cronkite, American TV newsreader. † |
6319 Beregovoj | 1990 WJ3 | Georgi Beregovoi, Russian cosmonaut † ‡ |
6320 Bremen | 1991 AL3 | Bremen, Germany. † |
6321 Namuratakao | 1991 BV | Takao Namura, a well-known telescope-mirror maker. † |
6323 Karoji | 1991 CY1 | Hiroshi Karoji, Japanese astronomer. † |
6326 Idamiyoshi | 1991 FJ1 | Miyoshi Ida, Japanese amateur astronomer. † |
6329 Hikonejyo | 1992 EU1 | Hikone Castle, Hikone, Shiga, Japan. † |
6330 Koen | 1992 FN | Koen Yanagiya, rakugoka. † |
6332 Vorarlberg | 1992 FP3 | Vorarlberg, Austria. † |
6333 Helenejacq | 1992 LG | * |
6334 Robleonard | 1992 MM | * |
6336 Dodo | 1992 UU | Dodo, a large, flightless bird first discovered in 1507 on the island of Mauritius. † |
6337 Shiota | 1992 UC4 | Kazuo Shiota, Japanese amateur astronomer. † |
6338 Isaosato | 1992 UO4 | Isao Sato, Japanese astronomer. † |
6339 Giliberti | 1993 SG | * |
6340 Kathmandu | 1993 TF2 | Kathmandu, Nepal. † |
6345 Hideo | 1994 AX1 | Hideo Fukushima, Japanese astronomer. † |
6346 Syukumeguri | 1995 AY | A part of Kurohone, Gunma, Japan. † |
6349 Acapulco | 1995 CN1 | Acapulco, Mexico. † |
6350 Schlüter | 3526 P-L | Jochen Schlüter, German mineralogist or Arnulf Schlüter, German astronomer or Wolfgang Schlüter, German astronomer. † |
6351 Neumann | 4277 T-1 | Johann Balthasar Neumann, German baroque architect † |
6352 Schlaun | 2400 T-3 | Johann Conrad Schlaun, German baroque architect. |
6353 Semper | 3107 T-3 | * |
6354 Vangelis | 1934 GA | Vangelis Papathanassiou, Greek composer and multi-instrumentalist † |
6355 Univermoscow | 1969 TX5 | Lomonosov Moscow State University. † |
6356 Tairov | 1976 QR | Vasilij Egorovich Tairov, Russian viticulturist* |
6357 Glushko | 1976 SK3 | Valentin Petrovich Glushko, Soviet rocket scientist* |
6358 Chertok | 1977 AL1 | Boris Evseevich Chertok, Russian rocket scientist (specialist in guidance and control)* |
6359 Dubinin | 1977 AZ1 | Eduard Dubinin, Russian astrophysicist* |
6362 Tunis | 1979 KO | Tunis, Tunisia. † |
6363 Doggett | 1981 CB1 | LeRoy Elsworth Doggett, American astronomer and historian of astronomy [1][2] |
6364 Casarini | 1981 ET | Jeannine Casarini, French teacher, member of the Tunguska99 scientific expedition to Central Siberia † |
6365 Nickschneider | 1981 ES29 | Nicholas McCord Schneider, American astronomer* |
6366 Rainerwieler | 1981 UM22 | Rainer Wieler, Swiss geochemist at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) † |
6368 Richardmenendez | 1983 RM3 | Richard Menendez (b. 1957) has taught astronomy at St. Louis Community College for the last 14 years with his own curriculum aimed toward concepts and ideas for classroom teachers. He has done over 900 hours of public-outreach astronomy and has been a board member of the St. Louis Astronomical Society. † |
6370 Malpais | 1984 EY | Spanish for "bad country"/"badlands", used by early explorers of the American Southwest to designate difficult-going countryside strewn with rough lava flows or rocks, and now used to designate the rock found in such country, used for stone building construction (1999 Flagstaff Festival of Science asteroid naming contest winner) † |
6371 Heinlein | 1985 GS | Dieter Heinlein, meteorite and tektite collector for the Bavarian Meteorite Laboratory † ‡ |
6372 Walker | 1985 JW1 | Robert M. Walker, American astronomer* |
6373 Stern | 1986 EZ | S. Alan Stern, astronomer* |
6374 Beslan | 1986 PY4 | Beslan, Russia. † |
6375 Fredharris | 1986 TB5 | * |
6376 Schamp | 1987 KD1 | Larry and Becky Schamp, Americans stationed in Alice Springs, Australia, who took in members of the Shoemaker family after the car collision in which Eugene died † |
6377 Cagney | 1987 ML1 | James Cagney, American actor † |
6379 Vrba | 1987 VA1 | Karel Vrba, Czech mineralogy professor † |
6381 Toyama | 1988 DO1 | Miyuki Toyama, Japanese amateur astronomer and illustrator † |
6383 Tokushima | 1988 XU1 | Tokushima-Kainan Astronomical Observatory, Tokushima Prefecture, Japan |
6384 Kervin | 1989 AM | * |
6385 Martindavid | 1989 EC2 | Martin Alois David, Czech observatory director † |
6386 Keithnoll | 1989 NK1 | Keith S. Noll, American astronomer* |
6389 Ogawa | 1990 BX | Shigeo Ogawa, president of Seibundo-Shinkosha (publisher) |
6390 Hirabayashi | 1990 BG1 | Shigeto Hirabayashi, Japanese amateur astronomer* |
6391 Africano | 1990 BN2 | * |
6392 Takashimizuno | 1990 HR | Takashi Mizuno, Japanese amateur astronomer* |
6395 Hilliard | 1990 UE1 | * |
6396 Schleswig | 1991 AO3 | Schleswig, Germany/Denmark* |
6398 Timhunter | 1991 CD1 | Tim Hunter, American amateur astronomer* |
6399 Harada | 1991 GA | Shoji Harada, Japanese amateur astronomer † |
6400 Georgealexander | 1991 GQ1 | George Alexander, a public-affairs manager in Jet Propulsion Laboratory. † |
6401–6500 | ||
6401 Roentgen | 1991 GB2 | Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen, German physicist and Nobelist †* |
6402 Holstein | 1991 GQ10 | Holstein, Germany* |
6403 Steverin | 1991 NU | * |
6404 Vanavara | 1991 PS6 | Vanavara, town in Siberia near the Tunguska impact site † ‡ |
6405 Komiyama | 1992 HJ | Fukuji Komiyama (b. 1924), a Japanese agriculture and forestry technician. † |
6408 Saijo | 1992 UT5 | Yoshihiro Saijo, Japanese amateur astronomer |
6410 Fujiwara | 1992 WO4 | Masato? Fujiwara, Japanese amateur astronomer. † |
6411 Tamaga | 1993 TA | * |
6412 Kaifu | 1993 TL2 | Norio Kaifu, Japanese astronomer |
6413 Iye | 1993 TJ3 | Masanori Ie, Japanese astronomer |
6414 Mizunuma | 1993 UX | A part of Kurohone, Gunma, Japan |
6416 Nyukasayama | 1993 VY3 | Mount Nyūkasa, a mountain in central Japan. † |
6417 Liberati | 1993 XA | Libero Liberati (1926-1962), motorcyclist who won the Absolute Italian Championship in 1955 and 1956 riding a four-cylinder Gilera. † |
6418 Hanamigahara | 1993 XJ | Hanamigahara, a beautiful forest park in the northern part of Kurohone village, Gunma prefecture. † |
6419 Susono | 1993 XX | Susono, Shizuoka, Japan, near the discoverers' observing site at Mishima* |
6420 Riheijyaya | 1993 XG1 | Riheijyaya, a beautiful forest park in the western part of Kurohone village, Gunma prefecture. † |
6422 Akagi | 1994 CD1 | Mount Akagi, 1828 m above sea level, is a large stratovolcano in the mid-eastern part of Gunma prefecture. † |
6423 Harunasan | 1994 CP2 | Another of the Three Jomo Mountains, Mount Haruna, 1449 m above sea level, is located in the central part of Gunma prefecture. † |
6424 Ando | 1994 EN3 | Hiroyasu Ando, Japanese astronomer |
6426 Vanýsek | 1995 ED | Vladimír Vanýsek, Czech astronomer † |
6428 Barlach | 3513 P-L | Ernst Barlach, German sculptor* |
6429 Brancusi | 4050 T-1 | Constantin Brâncuși, Romanian sculptor † |
6432 Temirkanov | 1975 TR2 | Yuri Temirkanov, Russian conductor † |
6433 Enya | 1978 WC | Enya (Eithne Ní Bhraonáin), Irish singer and songwriter † ‡ |
6434 Jewitt | 1981 OH | David C. Jewitt, British astronomer |
6435 Daveross | 1984 DA | David Justin Ross (b. 1949), co-developer of the Prime Rib curve, a graphical display of energy requirements for rendezvous trajectories. † |
6436 Coco | 1985 JX1 | * |
6437 Stroganov | 1987 QS7 | The Stroganov family of Russia, who exploited the iron and gold mines of the Urals † |
6438 Suárez | 1988 BS3 | Buenaventura Suárez, 17th-18th-century Argentine Jesuit and astronomer † |
6439 Tirol | 1988 CV | Tyrol, Austria* |
6440 Ransome | 1988 RA2 | Arthur Ransome, British novelist † |
6441 Milenajesenská | 1988 RR2 | Milena Jesenská (1896–1944), Czech journalist † |
6442 Salzburg | 1988 RU3 | Salzburg, Austria* |
6444 Ryuzin | 1989 WW | Ryuzin, a small town within Toyota city, Aichi prefecture, Japan. † |
6445 Bellmore | 1990 FS1 | Named in honor of Tamara Bell and Michael More on the occasion of their wedding. They are recent graduates of the University of Arizona with degrees in political science and geology. The discoverer and her husband wish the newlyweds a harmonious marriage and rewarding careers. † |
6446 Lomberg | 1990 QL | Jon Lomberg, American artist † ‡ |
6447 Terrycole | 1990 TO1 | Terry Cole, chief technologist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and senior faculty associate in the Caltech Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering. † |
6449 Kudara | 1991 CL1 | Japanese astronomer, second president of Oriental Astronomical Association† |
6450 Masahikohayashi | 1991 GV1 | Masahiko Hayashi (b. 1959), professor of astronomy at the Department of Astronomy of the University of Tokyo. † |
6451 Kärnten | 1991 GP10 | Carinthia, Austria* |
6452 Johneuller | 1991 HA | John Euller, Physics Teacher, Eastridge High School, Irondequoit, NY* |
6456 Golombek | 1992 OM | Matthew Philip Golombek, American planetary geologist † |
6457 Kremsmünster | 1992 RT | Kremsmünster, Austria, location of the observatory (Sternwarte Kremsmünster) of the Benedictine monastery* |
6458 Nouda | 1992 TD1 | Tadasuke Nouda, Japanese astronomer † |
6459 Hidesan | 1992 UY5 | Hideo Sato, Japanese astronomer |
6460 Bassano | 1992 UK6 | * |
6461 Adam | 1993 VB5 | Robert Adam (1728-1792), a Scottish architect. † |
6462 Myougi | 1994 AF2 | Also one of the Three Jomo Mountains, Mount Myougi, 1104 m above sea level and created by volcanic activity, is located at the southwestern part of Gunma prefecture. † |
6463 Isoda | 1994 AG3 | Sachiko or Yukiko Isoda, Japanese* |
6464 Kaburaki | 1994 CK | Masaki Kaburaki, Japanese astronomer* |
6465 Zvezdotchet | 1995 EP | Zvezdochet, the Russian magazine for amateur astronomers* |
6467 Prilepina | 1979 TS2 | * |
6468 Welzenbach | 1981 ED19 | Linda Welzenbach, American geologist, Collection Manager of the Meteorite Collection of the National Museum of Natural History † |
6469 Armstrong | 1982 PC | Neil Armstrong, Apollo 11 astronaut † |
6470 Aldrin | 1982 RO1 | Buzz Aldrin, Apollo 11 astronaut † |
6471 Collins | 1983 EB1 | Michael Collins, Italian-American Apollo 11 astronaut † |
6472 Rosema | 1985 TL | * |
6473 Winkler | 1986 GM | Gernot M. R. Winkler, American astronomer [1] |
6474 Choate | 1987 SG1 | Dennis Choate, American astronomer or Larry Mercer Choate, American astronomer* |
6475 Refugium | 1987 SZ6 | Latin word for "refuge"* |
6478 Gault | 1988 JC1 | Donald E. Gault, American planetary geologist † |
6479 Leoconnolly | 1988 LC | Leo Paul Connolly, American astronomer* |
6480 Scarlatti | 1988 PM1 | Domenico Scarlatti, Italian composer and instrumentalist † |
6481 Tenzing | 1988 RH2 | Tenzing Norgay, Sherpa mountain climber † |
6482 Steiermark | 1989 AF7 | Styria, Austria* |
6483 Nikolajvasil'ev | 1990 EO4 | Nikolai Vasil'ev, Russian scientific director of the Interdisciplinary Independent Tunguska Expeditions † ‡ |
6484 Barthibbs | 1990 FT1 | Bart Hibbs, American physicist* |
6485 Wendeesther | 1990 UR1 | Wendee Esther Wallach-Feldman (afterwards Wendee Wallach-Levy), former teacher. Married to astronomer David H. Levy with whom she co-directs their private observatory (Jarnac Observatory) in Vail, Arizona[3] |
6487 Tonyspear | 1991 GA1 | Tony Spear, American engineer, latterly of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory* |
6488 Drebach | 1991 GU9 | Volkssternwarte Drebach (Drebach Public Observatory and planetarium), Germany † ‡ |
6489 Golevka | 1991 JX | Goldstone Observatory/Evpatoria/Kashima † |
6493 Cathybennett | 1992 CA | * |
6496 Kazuko | 1992 UG2 | Kazuko Ōtsuka, Japanese* |
6497 Yamasaki | 1992 UR3 | Masamitsu Yamasaki, Japanese astronomer † |
6498 Ko | 1992 UJ4 | Ko Nagasawa, worker at the University of Tokyo's Earthquake Research Institute and the Public Information Office at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. |
6499 Michiko | 1992 UV6 | Michiko Hirasawa, wife of one of discoverers. † |
6500 Kodaira | 1993 ET | Keiichi Kodaira, Japanese astronomer |
References
- 1 2 "The USNO Asteroid Connection" (PDF). The USNO Transit. April–May 2009. Retrieved 2014-09-04.
- ↑ Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 28 (1996), pp. 1450–1451
- ↑ http://www.cortlandbusiness.com/news/pressrelease.asp?RECORD_KEY%5BPressReleases%5D=dbID&dbID%5BPressReleases%5D=140
Preceded by 5,501–6,000 |
Meanings of minor planet names List of minor planets: 6,001–7,000 |
Succeeded by 6,501–7,000 |
|
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 01, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.