Meanings of minor planet names: 12001–13000

This is a partial list of meanings of minor planet names. See meanings of minor planet names for a list of all such partial lists.

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 number-range 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published), a key source is Lutz D. Schmadel's Dictionary of Minor Planet Names, among others.[1][2][3] Meanings that do not quote a reference (the "†" links) are tentative. Meanings marked with an asterisk (*) are guesswork, and should be checked against the mentioned sources to ensure that the identification is correct.

12001–12100

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12001 Gasbarini 1996 ED9 Ron Gasbarini, Canadian amateur astronomer
12002 Suess 1996 FR1 Franz Eduard Suess, Austrian geologist
12003 Hideosugai 1996 FM5 Hideo Sugai (born 1930), a retired teacher, is a Japanese amateur astronomer. He has been observing variable stars since 1951, and his data have been reported to the Variable Star Observers League in Japan. JPL
12005 Delgiudice 1996 KA3 Maria del Giudice, friend and now wife of one of the discovery team's observers and measurers, Frank Shelly JPL
12006 Hruschka 1996 OO František Hruschka (1819-1888) invented the centrifugal honey extractor and demonstrated it at an exposition in Brno (now in the Czech Republic) in 1865. He gained recognition for the development of modern beekeeping.JPL
12007 Fermat 1996 TD7 Pierre de Fermat, (1601–1665), a lawyer in Toulouse, is considered the greatest amateur mathematician of all time. JPL
12008 Kandrup 1996 TY9 An exceptional researcher, teacher and mentor at the University of Florida, Henry E. Kandrup (1955–2003) will be remembered for his dedication to students. His eccentric and energetic lecturing style and love of nonlinear dynamics are now reflected in his celestial namesake, an unusual minor planet on a chaotic trajectory. JPL
12012 Kitahiroshima 1996 VH8 Kitahiroshima, a city in Hokkaido in northeastern Japan. JPL
12013 Sibatahosimi 1996 VU8 Sibatamachi-hosiwomirukai, founded in 1986, is an amateur astronomers' club in Sibata town, Miyagi prefecture. JPL
12014 Bobhawkes 1996 VX15 Robert (Bob) Lewis Hawkes, Canadian physicist
12016 Green 1996 XC George Green (1793–1841), a self-taught miller's son of Nottingham, was instrumental (along with Gauss) in making the theories of electricity and magnetism a part of mathematical physics. JPL
12022 Hilbert 1996 XH26 David Hilbert (1862–1943), professor at Göttingen and one of the greatest mathematicians of all time. JPL
12027 Masaakitanaka 1997 AB5 Japanese amateur astronomer Masaaki Tanaka (b. 1952) uses a Schmidt camera and binoculars to observe comets. He was one of the observers who rediscovered comet 122P/de Vico on 1995 Sept. 17.JPL
12028 Annekinney 1997 AK7 Astronomer Anne L. Kinney (born 1950) quantified the misalignment of the central black hole accretion disk and galaxy disk in Seyfert galaxies. She served as Director of NASA's Universe Division and Director of Goddard's Solar System Exploration Division. In 2015 she was named Chief Scientist for the Keck Observatory. JPL
12031 Kobaton 1997 BY4 Since 2005, Kobaton (also known as Shirakobato, or the Eurasian collared dove) has been the official bird of Saitama prefecture.JPL
12032 Ivory 1997 BP5 Sir James Ivory, Scottish mathematician. JPL
12033 Anselmo 1997 BD9 Anselmo Antonini (born 1946), an amateur astronomer in the Montelupo Group. JPL
12035 Ruggieri 1997 CP13 Guido Ruggieri, Italian amateur astronomer
12040 Jacobi 1997 EK8 Carl Gustav Jakob Jacobi, (1804–1851), professor at Königsberg and Berlin. JPL
12042 Laques 1997 FC Pierre Laques (born 1934) started his career at the private observatory of the Chateau D´Abadia near Hendaye, moving to the Pic du Midi, where the 1-m telescope had just been built. He is one of the codiscoverers of the satellite Saturn XII (Helène). JPL
12044 Fabbri 1997 FU Luciano Fabbri (born 1945), an amateur astronomer in the Montelupo Group. JPL
12045 Klein 1997 FH1 Felix Klein (1849–1925), a professor of mathematics at Erlangen and later at Göttingen. JPL
12047 Hideomitani 1997 GX3 In 1975, Hideo Mitani (born 1946) founded a library of nature photographs, including astronomical photographs. It became the most famous library of its kind in Japan and cultivated many other nature photographers. JPL
12050 Humecronyn 1997 HE14 Hume Blake Cronyn, Canadian businessman and politician
12051 Pícha 1997 JO Jaroslav Pícha, Czech meteorologist and amateur astronomer
12052 Aretaon 1997 JB16 Aretaon, a Trojan warrior who was killed by Teucer. JPL
12053 Turtlestar 1997 PK2 Turtle Star Observatory, Mülheim/Ruhr, Germany
12056 Yoshigeru 1997 YS11 Yoshida Shigeru (1952–1997), a Japanese physician. JPL
12057 Alfredsturm 1998 DK1 Alfred Sturm co-founder with Martin Geffert of the Starkenburg Observatory (Starkenburg-Sternwarte) in Heppenheim, Germany
12059 du Châtelet 1998 ED14 Emilie du Châtelet (1706-1749), an acknowledged scientist among the leading thinkers of her time, translated Newton's Principia Mathematica into French in 1749, this still being considered the best existing translation. In 1745 she showed that the energy of a moving object is proportional to its mass and the square of its velocity.JPL
12061 Alena 1998 FQ2 Alena Ruth Robbins, the mother of the discoverer. JPL
12064 Guiraudon 1998 FZ15 In 1961 Jean-Claude Guiraudon founded the Fédération Nationale des Clubs Scientifiques, which later evolved into the Association Nationale Sciences Techniques Jeunesse. He now works at the international level with MILSET, the Mouvement International pour le Loisir Scientifique Et Technique, which he helped create. JPL
12065 Jaworski 1998 FA33 Victor Jaworski (born 1984) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his physics project. JPL
12067 Jeter 1998 FH42 Crystal Lynn Jeter (born 1984) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her zoology project. JPL
12068 Khandrika 1998 FZ53 Harish Gautam Khandrika (born 1987) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his earth and space sciences project. JPL
12070 Kilkis 1998 FK63 Siir Sirinyasam Kilkis (born 1984) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her mathematics project. JPL
12071 Davykim 1998 FV63 Davy Kim (born 1985) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his mathematics project. JPL
12072 Anupamakotha 1998 FA65 Anupama Kotha (born 1985) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her medicine and health project. JPL
12073 Larimer 1998 FD66 Curtis James Larimer (born 1986) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his computer science project. JPL
12074 Carolinelau 1998 FZ68 Caroline Sue-Yuk Lau (born 1984) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her microbiology project. JPL
12075 Legg 1998 FX69 Tiffany Amelia Legg (born 1987) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her earth and space sciences project. JPL
12079 Kaibab 1998 FZ73 The Kaibab Formation, a massive limestone layer of Permian age that forms the bedrock of much of Northern Arizona. JPL
12084 Unno 1998 FL125 Juza Unno (a.k.a. Sano Shoichi), Japanese mystery writer and pioneer of science fiction JPL
12086 Joshualevine 1998 HC22 Joshua Levine (born 1985) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his chemistry project. JPL
12087 Tiffanylin 1998 HB30 Tiffany Fangtse Lin (born 1984) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her biochemistry project. JPL
12088 Macalintal 1998 HZ31 Jeric Valles Macalintal (born 1986) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his physics project. JPL
12089 Maichin 1998 HO35 Diana Marie Maichin (born 1983) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her physics project. JPL
12091 Jesmalmquist 1998 HS96 Jessica Lea Malmquist (born 1987) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her behavioral and social sciences project. JPL
12093 Chrimatthews 1998 HF99 Christina Marie Matthews (born 1986) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her medicine and health project. JPL
12094 Mazumder 1998 HX99 Mark Mohan Mazumder (born 1985) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his medicine and health project. JPL
12095 Pinel 1998 HE102 Philippe Pinel (1745-1826), a French physician who made revolutionary contributions to the treatment of patients suffering from mental illness, became chief physician at the La Salpêtrière clinic in Paris. His Traité médico-philosophique sur l´Aliénation mentale (1801) has been translated into several languages.JPL
12099 Meigooni 1998 HQ124 DDavid Nima Meigooni (born 1986) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his biochemistry project. JPL
12100 Amiens 1998 HR149 Amiens, the capital of Picardy, is famous for its cathedral, the tallest of the Gothic churches in France. Notable for its beautiful sculptures on the principal façade, it has been named the "Parthenon of Gothic architecture". The city is also worth a visit for its complex of gardens along the Somme river.JPL

12101–12200

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12101 Trujillo 1998 JX2 Chadwick Aaron Trujillo (born 1973), of the California Institute of Technology, specializes in the study of Kuiper belt objects. JPL
12102 Piazzolla (1998 JB4) Astor Piazzolla, Argentinean composer best known for his distinct nuevo tango. JPL
12104 Chesley 1998 KO6 Steven R. Chesley (born 1965), of the Solar System Dynamics Group at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, is an expert in determination of the orbits of minor planets and application to the study of earth-impact probability. JPL
12106 Menghuan 1998 KQ31 Meng Huan (born 1985) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his earth and space sciences project. JPL
12111 Ulm 1998 LU Ulm, a city in Germany on the banks of the Donau river. JPL
12112 Sprague 1998 MK4 Ann Sprague (b. 1946) is a senior research associate with the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory of the University of Arizona. She is known for her work on the atmospheres of Mercury, the moon and Mars, as well as on the Messenger mission to Mercury.JPL
12113 Hollows 1998 OH12 Fred Hollows (1929–1993), a New Zealand-born ophthalmologist. JPL
12115 Robertgrimm 1998 SD2 Robert Grimm (b. 1960) is a planetary geophysicist. His thermal models led to the first mathematical representations of fluid flow on meteorite parent bodies and to a greater understanding of the thermal and collisional evolution of minor planets, including the heliocentric zonation of the main belt.JPL
12117 Meagmessina 1999 JT60 Meagan Elizabeth Messina (born 1985) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her earth and space sciences project. JPL
12118 Mirotsin 1999 NC9 Yauhen Adolfovich Mirotsin (born 1985) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his mathematics project. JPL
12119 Memamis 1999 NG9 Megan Marie Miskowski (born 1984) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her environmental science project. JPL
12123 Pazin 1999 OS Pazin, a Croatian town in the Istrian Peninsula and the administrative center of Istria County. JPL
12124 Hvar 1999 RG3 Hvar, a Croatian island in the Adriatic Sea, located off the Dalmatian coast. JPL
12125 Jamesjones 1999 RS4 James Jones, Canadian astronomer
12127 Mamiya 1999 RD37 Rinzo Mamiya (1780–1844), an explorer and surveyor of the northern area of Japan. JPL
12128 Palermiti 1999 RP43 Mike Palermiti, director of an observatory in Florida. JPL
12130 Mousa 1999 RD146 Ahmed and Sarah Shaker Mousa, American finalists, 2000–2006 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) *
12131 Echternach 2085 P-L Eddy Echternach, Dutch author, science writer and astronomy popularizer JPL
12132 Wimfröger 2103 P-L Willem Albertus Fröger, Dutch-Argentinian amateur astronomer JPL
12133 Titulaer 2558 P-L Chriet Titulaer, Dutch science writer and astronomer, co-presenter, with Henk Terlingen, of the Dutch television coverage of the Apollo Moon landings JPL
12134 Hansfriedeman 2574 P-L Johannes Lambertus Maria ("Hans") Friedeman, 20th-century Dutch journalist and space enthusiast JPL
12135 Terlingen 3021 P-L Henk Terlingen, Dutch journalist, co-author, with Chriet Titulaer, of the Dutch television coverage of the Apollo Moon landings JPL
12136 Martinryle 3045 P-L Martin Ryle, 20th-century British astrophysicist and radio-astronomer, inventor of the aperture synthesis technique of interferometry JPL
12137 Williefowler 4004 P-L William Alfred Fowler, 20th-century American nuclear astrophysicist JPL
12138 Olinwilson 4053 P-L Olin C. Wilson, 20th-century American spectroscopist, co-discoverer, with Manali Kallat Vainu Bappu, of the Wilson-Bappu effect JPL
12139 Tomcowling 4055 P-L Thomas G. Cowling, 20th-century British astrophysicist JPL
12140 Johnbolton 4087 P-L John G. Bolton, 20th-century Australian radio astronomer pioneer JPL
12141 Chushayashi 4112 P-L Chushiro Hayashi, Japanese astrophysicist JPL
12142 Franklow 4624 P-L Frank J. Low, American physicist and infrared astronomer, inventor of the gallium-doped germanium bolometer JPL
12143 Harwit 4631 P-L Martin O. Harwit, Czech-American astrophysicist and infrared astronomer, director (1987–1995) of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum JPL
12144 Einhart 4661 P-L Einhart (also Eginhard or Einhard, ca. 770) was a Frankish scholar and historian. He was the chancellor of Charles the Great and of his son Ludwig the Pious. Einhard wrote Vita Karoli Magni, the biography of Charles the Great, one of the most precious books of the early Middle Ages.JPL
12145 Behaim 4730 P-L Martin Behaim (1459-1507) was a German merchant, astronomer and cosmographer from Nürnberg. He traveled through Europe and became a Portuguese knight. He developed the earliest terrestrial globe, Erdapfel, or `Earth Apple', with a diameter of about 50 cm.JPL
12146 Ostriker 6035 P-L Jeremiah P. Ostriker, an American astrophysicist. JPL
12147 Bramante 6082 P-L Donato Bramante (1444-1514) was an Italian architect of the high Renaissance, working mainly in Milan and Rome. In Rome he designed his greatest work, St. Peter's Basilica.JPL
12148 Caravaggio 6636 P-L Michelangelo Merist da Caravaggio (1571-1610) was an Italian artist of the Renaissance. He was almost forgotten after his death, but in the twentieth century his importance was rediscovered because of his great influence on the Baroque style during the Counter Reformation.JPL
12149 Begas 9099 P-L Begas is the name of a German family of nineteenth-century artists, of whom the best known was Romantik-style painter Carl Joseph Begas (1794-1854). Of his four sons, Reinhold (1831-1911) and Carl Begas, Jr. (1845-1916), were sculptors, and Oskar (1828-1883) and Adalbert (1836-1888) Begas were painters.JPL
12150 De Ruyter 1051 T-1 Michiel Adriaenszoon de Ruyter, 17th-century Dutch admiral JPL
12151 Oranje-Nassau 1220 T-1 Willem I, Prince van Oranje-Nassau (1533-1584), led the Netherlands provinces in their war of liberation against Spain during 1568-1648. "The Father of the Fatherland" was assassinated and is entombed in the Nieuwe Kerk in Delft. The Dutch national anthem, the Wilhelmus, was written in his honor.JPL
12152 Aratus 1287 T-1 Hellenistic poet Aratus of Soli (c. 315/310-before 235 B.C.) was the author of Phaenomena ("Appearances"), an influential didactic poem composed around 275 B.C. that describes the celestial sphere, the constellations and weather prognostications based on their rising and setting.JPL
12153 Conon 3219 T-1 Conon of Samos (c. 280-c. 220 B.C.) was a Hellenistic astronomer and mathematician who worked in Alexandria. In 246 B.C. he created the constellation of Coma Berenices, commemorating the sacrifice of Queen Berenice's tresses of hair after her husband's return from the Third Syrian War.JPL
12154 Callimachus 3329 T-1 Callimachus of Cyrene (c. 305-c. 240 B.C.) was a Hellenistic scholar and poet who worked in Alexandria, where he compiled a catalogue of the famous library. He wrote the poem Coma Berenices commemorating the creation of the eponymous constellation by Conon of Samos in 246 B.C.JPL
12155 Hyginus 4193 T-1 Gaius Julius Hyginus (c. 64 B.C.-A.D. 17), Roman historian, philologer and mythographer, presided over the Palatine Library in Rome. His De Astronomia (or Poeticon Astronomicon) gives a comprehensive overview of the myths associated with the constellations. The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12156 Ubels 1042 T-2 Egbert Ubels, Dutch fireman who perished on 9 May 2008 while fighting a shipyard fire in De Punt (Drenthe, Netherlands), along with colleagues Raymond Patrick Soyer and Anne Kregel JPL
12157 Können 1070 T-2 Günther Peter Können (b. 1944), a researcher at the Koninklijk Nederlands Meteorologisch Instituut, specialized in atmospheric optics. He is famous for his book Polarized light in Nature, which describes phenomena such as halos and rainbows. The name was suggested by M. Drummen.JPL
12158 Tape 1101 T-2 Walter Tape (b. 1941) is an Alaskan mathematician. With his book Atmospheric halos he made an outstanding contribution to the popularization of these beautiful phenomena. The name was suggested by G. P. Können and M. Drummen.JPL
12159 Bettybiegel 1142 T-2 Rebekka A. "Betty" Biegel (1886-1943) studied astronomy in Leiden, obtained her doctorate in Zürich, pursued psychology in Utrecht and developed psychological instruments for testing people. She commited suicide by cyanide rather than allow herself to be transported to Auschwitz. The name was suggested by W. R. Dick.JPL
12160 Karelwakker 1152 T-2 Karel F. Wakker (b. 1944), professor of astrodynamics at Delft Techical University, has made important contributions to Dutch, ESA and NASA space projects, as well as inspiring numerous students. The name was suggested by F. Israel.JPL
12161 Avienius 1158 T-2 Postumius Rufius Festus Avienius, who lived in the second half of the fourth century, was a Latin poet from Etruria. He composed didactic poems on astronomy and geography. His Aratea was based on earlier Latin translations of Aratus' Phaenomena. The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12162 Bilderdijk 2145 T-2 Willem Bilderdijk (1756-1831) was a Dutch poet and scholar who composed two didactic astronomical poems, Starrenkennis (1794) and De Starrenhemel (1807). These described the celestial sphere, the Milky Way and the constellations. The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12163 Manilius 3013 T-2 Roman poet and astrologer Marcus Manilius (1st century A.D.) wrote the comprehensive astronomical-astrological poem Astronomica. The five-volume work was dedicated to Tiberius and contains a mythological description of the constellations and the Milky Way. The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12164 Lowellgreen 3067 T-2 Lowell Clark Green (born 1925), a Lutheran pastor/theologian for more than half a century and Renaissance/Reformation scholar, now resident in Buffalo, New York. JPL
12165 Ringleb 3289 T-2 Peter Ringleb, German neurologist, member of the team who cared for the second discoverer JPL
12166 Oliverherrmann 3372 T-2 Oliver Herrmann, German neurologist, member of the team who cared for the second discoverer JPL
12167 Olivermüller 4306 T-2 Oliver Müller, German cardiologist, member of the team who cared for the second discoverer JPL
12168 Polko 5141 T-2 Norbert Polko, German astronomical assistant JPL
12169 Munsterman 2031 T-3 Henk Munsterman, Dutch amateur astrophotographer JPL
12170 Vanvollenhoven 2372 T-3 Pieter van Vollenhoven, Dutch professor of risk management at the Technical University of Twente and Dutch ambassador of the International Year of Astronomy JPL
12171 Johannink 2382 T-3 Carl F. Johannink (b. 1959) is a Dutch high-school teacher and amateur astronomer. His main interests lie in meteor astronomy. He is a very prolific meteor observer, active within the Dutch Meteor Society. The name was suggested by K. Miskotte.JPL
12172 Niekdekort 2390 T-3 Niek De Kort (b. 1956) has done outstanding work popularizing astronomy. He authored several books, including one about space research and the course book Modern Astronomy (1980) for a TV course with an enrollment of 25~000 people. The name was suggested by H. van Woerden and A. v. d. Brugge.JPL
12173 Lansbergen 3135 T-3 Philippus Lansbergen, 16th-17th-century Dutch Calvinist minister and astronomer, author of the first Dutch popular book on astronomy JPL
12174 van het Reve 3164 T-3 Karel van het Reve (1921-1999), professor of Slavic languages at Leiden University and a prolific writer, was considered to be one of the finest Dutch essayists with wide-ranging interests. The name was suggested by F. Israel.JPL
12175 Wimhermans 3197 T-3 Dutch author Willem Frederik Hermans (1921-1995) was considered one of the most important writers in the Netherlands in the postwar period. His oeuvre includes novels, short stories, plays, along with poetry and essays, as well as philosophical and scientific works. The name was suggested by F. Israel.JPL
12176 Hidayat 3468 T-3 Bambang Hidayat (b. 1934) is an active promotor of astronomy in Indonesia. Known for his work on visual binaries and H-emission-line stars, he was director of Bosscha Observatory in Lembang during 1968-1999 and vice-president of the IAU during 1994-2000.JPL
12177 Raharto 4074 T-3 Indonesian astronomer Moedji Raharto (b. 1954) is senior lecturer at the Institut Teknologi Bandung and was director of Bosscha Observatory in Lembang during 2000-2003. He is an authority on Galactic structure, based on the Hipparcos and IRAS-Point Source catalogues.JPL
12178 Dhani 4304 T-3 Indonesian astronomer and solar physicist Herdiwijaya Dhani (b. 1963) was director of Bosscha Observatory in Lembang during 2004-2005. He is known for his work on binaries, solar magnetic activity and its influence on weather and climate.JPL
12179 Taufiq 5030 T-3 Indonesian astronomer Taufiq Hidayat (b. 1965), associate professor at the Institut Teknologi Bandung, was director of Bosscha Observatory in Lembang during 2006-2009. Known for work on the solar system and extrasolar transits, he actively fights the adverse effects of urbanisation around the observatory.JPL
12180 Kistemaker 5167 T-3 Jacob Kistemaker (1917–2010), Teylers professor at Leiden University. JPL
12182 Storm 1973 UQ5 Theodor Storm (1817–1888), a German writer. JPL
12185 Gasprinskij 1976 SL5 Ismail Gasprinskij (1851–1914) was a Crimean-Tatar teacher, enlightener, writer, publisher and public figure. JPL
12186 Mitukurigen 1977 ER5 Mitukuri Genpo (1799–1863), a physician of Western medicine in the late Edo period. JPL
12187 Lenagoryunova 1977 RL7 Elena (Lena) Viktorovna Goryunova (born 1961), hydrologist at Sebastopol Institute of Hydrography. JPL
12189 Dovgyj 1978 RQ1 Stanislav Alekseevich Dovgyj (born 1954), a corresponding member of the Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences, is a scientist in the field of mechanics. JPL
12190 Sarkisov 1978 SE5 Pavel Djibraelovich Sarkisov (born 1932), rector of the D. I. Mendeleev Moscow Chemical-Technological University. JPL
12191 Vorontsova 1978 TT8 Margarita Alekseevna Vorontsova (born 1923), a pediatrician at the Simferopol children's hospital
12197 Jan-Otto 1980 FR2 Jan-Otto Carlsson, Swedish professor of inorganic chemistry at Uppsala University JPL
12199 Sohlman 1980 TK6 Michael Sohlman (born 1944) is a well-known Swedish specialist in economics and finance, executive director of the Nobel Fund, a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences. JPL

12201–12300

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12211 Arnoschmidt 1981 KJ Arno Schmidt, German novelist. JPL
12214 Miroshnikov 1981 RF2 Mikhail Mikhailovich Miroshnikov (born 1926), director of the Vavilov State Optical Institute from 1966 to 1989. JPL
12218 Fleischer 1982 RK Randall Craig Fleischer (born 1959), the ebullient and multi-talented music director and conductor of the Flagstaff Symphony Orchestra. JPL
12219 Grigor'ev 1982 SC8 Mikhail Grigor'evich Grigor'ev, Russian chief (1957–1962) of the space-vehicle launch site now known as the Plesetsk Cosmodrome (see also 11824) JPL
12220 Semenchur 1982 UD6 Semen Ivanovich Churyumov, Ukrainian doctor of philosophy and socionics, senior lecturer in the mathematics department at the Kiev National Aviation University JPL
12221 Ogatakoan 1982 VS2 Ogata Koan (1810–1863), a medical doctor with knowledge of European medicine in the late Edo period. JPL
12222 Perotto 1982 WA Pier Giorgio Perotto, Italian electronics engineer JPL
12223 Hoskin 1983 TX Michael Anthony Hoskin, British historian of astronomy JPL
12224 Jimcornell 1984 UN2 James Cornell, American astronomer JPL
12225 Yanfernández 1985 PQ Yanga Rolando Fernández, Canadian astronomer
12226 Caseylisse 1985 TN Casey Lisse (Carey Michael Lisse), American astronomer
12227 Penney 1985 TO3 Big John Penney is representative of the team of workers who find a deep and abiding love for the challenges and rigors of wintering at South Pole Station. JPL
12229 Paulsson 1985 UK3 Rolf Paulsson (b. 1943), a lecturer at Uppsala University, has been an outstanding teacher of theoretical physics for generations of students.JPL
12234 Shkuratov 1986 RP2 Yurij G. Shkuratov, Ukrainian director of the Institute of Astronomy of Kharkiv National University JPL
12235 Imranakperov 1986 RB12 Imran Gurru ogly Akperov, Rector of the International Banking Institute in Saint Petersburg, Russia. JPL
12237 Coughlin 1987 HE Thomas B. Coughlin, of the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) mission team and programs manager of the Applied Physics Laboratory of Johns Hopkins University. JPL
12238 Actor 1987 YU1 Actor, the alleged father of Cteatos and Eurytos, two Greek warriors who beat Nestor in the chariot race. JPL
12239 Carolinakou 1988 CN4 Carolina Carreira Nakou (b. 2001), the daughter of Sandra Carreira and Thodoris Nakos. The latter works on galactic lenses at the Royal Observatory at Uccle. JPL
12240 Droste-Hülshoff 1988 PG2 Annette von Droste-Hülshoff, German author and poet. JPL
12241 Lefort 1988 PQ2 Gertrud Freiin von le Fort (1876–1971), German poet. JPL
12242 Koon 1988 QY Koon, a notable fighter, the eldest son of Antenor. JPL
12244 Werfel 1988 RY2 Franz Werfel, Czech poet. JPL
12246 Pliska 1988 RJ8 Pliska was the first capital of the Bulgarian state, founded in 681. The conversion into Christianity under Knayz Boris I took pkace in Pliska in 855. There he welcomed the disciples of the brothers Saint Cyril and Saint Methodius, creators of the Slavic alphabet. It is also the birthplace of the discoverer.JPL
12252 Gwangju 1988 VT1 Gwangju, Korea. JPL
12257 Lassine 1989 GL4 George Lassine (1953–2003), a member of the Belgian astronomical club Astronomie Centre Ardenne-Neufchâteau. JPL
12258 Oscarwilde 1989 GN4 Oscar Wilde, Irish playwright, poet, and writer. JPL
12259 Szukalski 1989 SZ1 Albert Szukalski, Belgian artist. JPL
12261 Ledouanier 1989 TY4 Henri Rousseau, French post-impressionist painter, nicknamed "Le Douanier" ("The Customs Officer"). JPL
12262 Nishio 1989 UL Tomoaki Nishio (born 1963), an editor of Gekkan Tenmon Guide, the Japanese monthly astronomical magazine. JPL
12267 Denneau 1990 KN1 Larry Denneau, American software engineer for the Moving Object Processing System of Pan-STARRS JPL
12270 Bozar 1990 QR9 The name "Bozar" for the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels was inspired by the language of Brussels residents. JPL
12272 Geddylee 1990 SZ3 Geddy Lee (Gary Lee Weinrib), Canadian bassist, vocalist and keyboardist for the band Rush JPL
12275 Marcelgoffin 1990 VS5 Marcel Goffin (1913–1999), an accomplished amateur violin maker. JPL
12276 IJzer 1990 WW1 IJzer, a river in Flanders. JPL
12277 Tajimasatonokai 1990 WN2 Tajimasatonokai is an astronomy group which has long been engaged in popularizing astronomy by holding public viewing events and lectures around Toyooka city, Hyogo prefecture. JPL
12278 Kisohinoki 1990 WQ2 Kiso cypresses, (Kiso hinoki in Japanese), used as building materials for castles during the Edo era JPL
12279 Laon 1990 WP4 Laon, the capital of the Aisne department in northern France. JPL
12280 Reims 1990 WS4 Reims, a city in the French department of Marne, the old capital (Durocortorum, later Remi) of the Roman province Belgica. JPL
12281 Chaumont 1990 WA5 Chaumont, Haute-Marne, France JPL
12282 Crombecq 1991 BV1 Michelle Crombecq (born 1946), a secretary at the port of Antwerp. JPL
12284 Pohl 1991 FP Frederik Pohl, American author
12286 Poiseuille 1991 GY4 Jean Louis Marie Poiseuille (1797-1869) was a French physicist and physiologist who, through his work on the pressure of blood, became interested in the resistance of the flow of viscous fluids in small tubes. This led to the formulation of the Hagen-Poiseuille Law. The unit of viscosity is named the poise.JPL
12287 Langres 1991 GH5 Langres, a French city in the south of the Haute-Marne department. JPL
12288 Verdun 1991 GC6 Verdun, France. JPL
12289 Carnot 1991 GP7 Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot, (1796–1832) a French physicist. JPL
12291 Gohnaumann 1991 LJ2 Gottfried Naumann (Gottfried Otto Helmut Naumann), German ophthalmic pathologist. JPL
12292 Dalton 1991 LK2 John Dalton, British physicist and chemist. JPL
12294 Avogadro 1991 PQ2 Amedeo Avogadro, Italian scientis. JPL
12295 Tasso 1991 PE3 Torquato Tasso, an Italian writer and poet. JPL
12298 Brecht 1991 PL17 Bertolt Brecht, German dramatist, stage director, and poet. JPL

12301–12400

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12301 Eötvös 1991 RR12 Loránd Eötvös, Hungarian physicist. JPL
12306 Pebronstein 1991 TM14 Peter Bronstein (born 1947), father in-law of the discoverer. JPL
12309 Tommygrav 1992 DD3 Tommy Grav, Norwegian astronomer JPL
12310 Londontario 1992 DE4 London, Ontario, the Canadian city. JPL
12311 Ingemyr 1992 EO6 Mikael Ingemyr (b. 1991), a student at the high school for space studies in Kiruna, was one of the winners of "The Universe--yours to discover with the Nordic Optical Telescope".JPL
12312 Väte 1992 EM8 Väte is a small parish on Gotland with a church from the thirteenth century. Here can also be found an old farm, Norrbys, reflecting agricultural life 70 years ago.JPL
12317 Madicampbell 1992 HH1 Margaret Diane Campbell, Canadian astronomer
12318 Kästner 1992 HD7 Erich Kästner, German author and journalist. JPL
12320 Loschmidt 1992 PH1 Josef Loschmidt (1821–1895), Czech physicist. JPL
12321 Zurakowski 1992 PZ1 Paul R. Zurakowski (born 1927), volunteer director of the Chabot Observatory Telescope Makers' Workshop for more than 30 years. JPL
12323 Haeckel 1992 RX Ernst Haeckel (1834–1919), German naturalist. JPL
12324 Van Rompaey 1992 RS3 Pierre Van Rompaey (born 1921), a Belgian architect and an artist of surreal figurative paintings. JPL
12325 Bogota 1992 RH7 Bogotá, the capital of Colombia JPL
12326 Shirasaki 1992 SF Shuichi Shirasaki, Japanese anaesthesiologist, the finalist in the selection of a Japanese astronaut candidate in 1999 JPL
12327 Terbrüggen 1992 SX1 Dietrich Terbrüggen (born 1941), a well-known German surgeon. JPL
12329 Liebermann 1992 SR23 Max Liebermann (1847–1935), a German painter. JPL
12335 Tatsukushi 1992 WJ3 Tatsukushi is a beach on the western side of Ashizuri peninsular in Kochi prefecture known for the unusual sight of rock pillars of various sizes sculpted by waves. JPL
12339 Carloo 1992 YW1 Carloo, a small hamlet south of the Royal Observatory at Uccle. JPL
12340 Stalle 1992 YJ2 Stalle, a hamlet in the eastern part of the municipality of Uccle. JPL
12341 Calevoet 1993 BN4 Calevoet is a hamlet in the southwestern part of the municipality of Uccle. The name means "grassless ford". However, the name also means "bare foot", which gave birth to the legend that Charlemagne crossed the small river at Calevoet barefooted. JPL
12342 Kudohmichiko 1993 BL12 Michiko Kudoh (born 1942) has been associated with the Gotoh Planetarium and Astronomical Museum in Tokyo. She reaches out to other astronomers through her web site. JPL
12343 Martinbeech 1993 DT1 Martin Beech, British-Canadian astronomer
12350 Feuchtwanger 1993 HA6 Lion Feuchtwanger, a German author. JPL
12352 Jepejacobsen 1993 OX6 Jens Peter Jacobsen, a Danish writer and poet. JPL
12353 Màrquez 1993 OR9 Gabriel Garc{í}a Màrquez (1927–2014), a Columbian novelist. JPL
12354 Hemmerechts 1993 QD3 Kristien Hemmerechts, a Flemish author. JPL
12355 Coelho 1993 QU3 Paulo Coelho (born 1947), a Brazilian lyricist and novelist. JPL
12356 Carlscheele 1993 RM14 Carl Wilhelm Scheele, a Swedish apothecary. JPL
12357 Toyako 1993 ST1 Lake Toya ("Toyako" in Japanese), part of Shikotsu-Toya National Park in Hokkaido JPL
12358 Azzurra 1993 SO2 Azzurra (b. 2010 Jan. 4) is the grandchild of the discoverer. Her name is a hope for clearer skies.JPL
12359 Cajigal 1993 SN3 With his founding in 1831 of the Military Academy of Mathematics, Juan Manuel Cajigal y Odoardo (1803–1856) initiated the study of mathematics and engineering in Venezuela. His installation of the first astronomical telescopes in Caracas was recognized with the establishment of El Observatorio Cajigal there in 1888. JPL
12360 Unilandes 1993 SQ3 The Universidad de Los Andes, founded in Mérida in 1785, is one of the most important educational institutions in Venezuela. JPL
12362 Mumuryk 1993 TS1 Mumuryk Keiko Yuharo, Japanese painter and illustrator, whose work appears on posters for the Japanese International Space Station and the STS-123 mission JPL
12363 Marinmarais 1993 TA24 Marin Marais (1656–1728), the central figure in the French school of bass-viol composers and performers that flourished during the late 17th and early 18th centuries. JPL
12364 Asadagouryu 1993 XQ1 Asada Gouryu (1734–1799), an astronomer in the Japanese Edo period. JPL
12365 Yoshitoki 1993 YD Takahashi Yoshitoki (1764–1804), chief of the Edo National Astronomical Observatory at Edo, Japan, from 1795 to 1804. JPL
12366 Luisapla 1994 CD8 Luisa Pla, Spanish-Venezuelan teacher of French, born in Villarrobledo co-founder (with her husband, Manuel Sanchez Jordan) of the Lope de Vega high school in Valencia, founder of Spanish history studies at La Universidad de Carabobo JPL
12367 Ourinhos 1994 CN8 Ourinhos, São Paulo, Brazil JPL
12368 Mutsaers 1994 CM11 Charlotte Mutsaers, Dutch writer
12369 Pirandello 1994 CJ16 Luigi Pirandello (1867–1936), a Sicilian writer. JPL
12370 Kageyasu 1994 GB9 Takahashi Kageyasu, Japanese astronomer and geographer JPL
12372 Kagesuke 1994 JF Shibukawa Kagesuke (1787–1856), chief of the Edo National Astronomical Observatory in Edo, Japan, from 1809 to 1856. JPL
12373 Lancearmstrong 1994 JE9 Lance Armstrong (born 1971), an American cyclist and cancer survivor. JPL
12374 Rakhat 1994 JG9 Rakhat, a planet with the first known extraterrestrial life in the novel The Sparrow, by Mary Doria Russell. First contact is established when a group of specialists organized by Jesuits is sent to the planet. JPL
12376 Cochabamba 1994 NW1 Cochabamba, a city in Bolivia. JPL
12379 Thulin 1994 PQ11 Ingrid Thulin (1929–2004), a Swedish screen actor. JPL
12380 Sciascia 1994 PB14 Leonardo Sciascia (1921–1989), a Sicilian novelist and polemicist. JPL
12381 Hugoclaus 1994 PH30 Hugo Claus, Flemish writer. JPL
12382 Niagara Falls 1994 SO5 Niagara Falls
12383 Eboshi 1994 TF1 Eboshi-iwa (also known as Uba Shima), a large hat-shaped rock visible from the coast, symbol of Southern Beach of Chigasaki, Kanagawa prefecture JPL
12384 Luigimartella 1994 TC2 Luigi Martella (born 1956), a well-known Italian amateur astronomer. JPL
12386 Nikolova 1994 UK5 Simona Rumenova Nikolova, Bulgarian-Canadian astronomer
12387 Tomokofujiwara 1994 UT11 Tomoko Fujiwara, Japanese assistant professor of astronomy at Kyushu University JPL
12388 Kikunokai 1994 VT6 Kikunokai, Japanese traditional dance troupe JPL
12391 Ecoadachi 1994 WE2 Adachi Ward (Eco-Adachi Ward), one of 23 wards of Tokyo, known for its environmentalism JPL
12395 Richnelson 1995 CD2 Richard Nelson, American astrophysicist JPL
12396 Amyphillips 1995 DL1 Amy Phillips (born 1956) received her MS in Optical Sciences from the University of Arizona. She has studied issues in remote sensing and properties of optical materials in harsh environments. She has also worked in the field of intellectual property, and is active in rural and suburban land-use issues. JPL
12397 Peterbrown 1995 FV14 Peter Brown, Canadian astronomer
12398 Pickhardt 1995 KJ3 Wilhelm Pickhardt (born 1923) studied geology at the Rheinische-Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Bonn. He conducted research at the Mining Research Institute for Bituminous Coal and held an adjunct professorship at the Technical University of Berlin. JPL
12399 Bartolini 1995 OD Corrado Bartolini, Professor of Astronomy at the University of Bologna
12400 Katumaru 1995 OA1 Katumaru Okuni (born 1932), the younger brother of the discoverer. JPL

12401–12500

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12401 Tucholsky 1995 OG10 Kurt Tucholsky, German writer and satirist*
12405 Nespoli 1995 RK Paolo Angelo Nespoli, Italian Mission Specialist astronaut JPL
12406 Zvíkov 1995 SZ1 Zvíkov Castle, Czech Republic
12407 Riccardi 1995 SC2 The historian of mathematics Pietro Riccardi (1828-1898) wrote the monumental work Biblioteca Matematica italiana dall'origine della stampa ai primi anni del XIX secolo, an annotated bibliography of all the books published by Italian scientists during the nineteenth century.JPL
12408 Fujioka 1995 SP2 Hiroshi Fujioka (b. 1946), born in Kuma Town, is an actor, martial artist, and a dedicated volunteer in Iraq, Ethiopia and Cambodia. Since his debut in 1970, he has starred in more than 20 movies and a number of TV dramas, including the most popular Japanese television program in the 1970s, Kamen Rider.JPL
12409 Bukovanská 1995 SL3 Marcela Bukovanská, Czech researcher in meteorics
12410 Donald Duck 1995 SM3 Donald Duck, the famous character of Walt Disney's cartoons, has amused generations of children and adults alike.JPL
12411 Tannokayo 1995 SQ3 Kayo Tanno, Japanese elementary school teacher and science educator, who worked on the staff of the Saga prefecture Space and Science Museum during 2002–2006 JPL
12412 Muchisachie 1995 ST4 Muchi Sachie, Japanese music teacher JPL
12413 Johnnyweir 1995 SQ29 Johnny Weir (born July 2, 1984), American athlete, figure-skating champion and Olympian, talented in many spheres of artistic endeavorJPL
12414 Bure 1995 SR29 Pavel Bure, ice hockey player
12415 Wakatatakayo 1995 SW52 Takayo Wakata, mother of the Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata JPL
12418 Tongling 1995 UX2 Tongling, Anhui
12421 Zhenya 1995 UH5 Eugenia Krysina (b. 1952), a chemist who lives in Moscow, is a friend of the discoverer and displays a keen interest in astronomy, especially in minor planets. Zhenya is the diminutive form of Eugenia.JPL
12423 Slotin 1995 UQ16 Louis Slotin, Canadian physicist and chemist
12426 Racquetball 1995 VL2 Racquetball, sport*
12431 Webster 1995 YY10 Alan Reginald Webster, British-Canadian engineer
12432 Usuda 1996 AR1 The Usuda Deep Space Center of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, located in Saku city, Nagano prefecture, conducts command operations and receives telemetry and data from deep-space explorers such as Hayabusa and Kaguya. The site features a parabolic antenna of diameter 64 meters and weight 1980 tons.JPL
12433 Barbieri 1996 AF4 Cesare Barbieri, Italian astronomer*
12435 Sudachi 1996 BX Citrus sudachi, a small, round, green citrus fruit that is a specialty of Tokushima prefecture, Japan JPL
12437 Westlane 1996 BN6 Westlane Secondary School, Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada
12439 Okasaki 1996 CA3 During the past three decades amateur astronomer Kiyomi Okasaki (b. 1950) has discovered two comets and three supernovae at his observatory in Kahoku, Yamagata prefecture.JPL
12440 Koshigayaboshi 1996 CF3 Koshigayaboshi, "the star of Koshigaya", southeast Saitama prefecture, Japan, in honour of the city's fiftieth anniversary in 2008 JPL
12442 Beltramemass 1996 DO1 Massimiliano Beltrame (1942-2001) taught topography and the science of construction at a high school in Terni. He was also an amateur astronomer specializing in photography. An astronomy club in Terni has been named in his memory.JPL
12443 Paulsydney 1996 EQ2 With the gracious support of his family, Paul Sydney, a physicist on the AMOS team, has dedicated many long hours to demonstrating that U.S. Air Force assets could be applied successfully to following up minor planets. In return, the Air Force has benefited significantly from collaboration with the astronomical community.JPL
12444 Prothoon 1996 GE19 Prothoon was a Trojan warrior who was killed by Teucer.JPL
12445 Sirataka 1996 HE2 The town of Sirataka, where the discoverer was born, is located in the southern part of Yamagata prefecture. The town is famous for its textile industry and weir-fishing.JPL
12446 Juliabryant 1996 PZ6 Australian astrophysicist Julia Bryant (b. 1971) is recognized for her past, present and future contributions to science, family and friendship.JPL
12447 Yatescup 1996 XA12 Yates Cup, Canadian sports trophy
12448 Mr. Tompkins 1996 XW18 Mr. Tompkins, character from George Gamow's books
12456 Genichiaraki 1997 AC1 Genichi Araki (b. 1954) is an amateur astronomer and a science teacher in Junior High School. He was one of the discoverers of comet C/1983 H1 (IRAS-Araki-Alcock).JPL
12460 Mando 1997 AF5 Mando, the largest annual festival in Iruma, Saitama prefecture, involves thousands of lantern lights. Since 1978 the Mando Festival has been conducted with the coordinated efforts of the citizenry and administration under a theme of cooperation and communication.JPL
12464 Manhattan 1997 AH8 Manhattan Island, New York, US*
12465 Perth Amboy 1997 AD10 Perth Amboy, New Jersey, US*
12468 Zachotín 1997 AE18 Zachotín, Czech Republic
12469 Katsuura 1997 AW18 Katsuura is a city in Chiba prefecture, where one can enjoy the wide ocean and forested hills. The Katsuura Tracking and Communication Station of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency is located on a hill to conduct command operations and receive telemetry from satellites that observe the earth or the moon.JPL
12470 Pinotti 1997 BC9 Roberto Pinotti (b. 1944), after getting his degree in political science in 1972, became a writer and amateur astronomer of the Montelupo Group.JPL
12471 Larryscherr 1997 CZ6 Lawrence Scherr (b. 1949), an optical engineer and lens designer, designed the optics for the NEAT/Oschin instrument. He has designed, built, tested or analyzed stray light for prototype medical instruments, intraocular lenses, scaterometers, large surveillance telescopes, automated optical test systems and Mars camera lenses.JPL
12472 Samadhi 1997 CW11 Samadhi Hindu/Buddhist concept
12473 Levi-Civita 1997 CM19 Tullio Levi-Civita, Italian mathematician*
12477 Haiku 1997 EY20 The Haiku, Japanese poetic form
12478 Suzukiseiji 1997 EX25 Seiji Suzuki (b. 1933), a retired teacher, is secretary of the Yamagata Astronomers Liaison Conference (since 1997) and the Yamagata Astronomers Club.JPL
12479 Ohshimaosamu 1997 EG27 Osamu Ohshima (b. 1954) is a high school teacher and one of Japan's leading observers of variable stars. He was a staff member at Bisei Astronomical Observatory and played an important role in the founding of the observatory, using his talent in mechanical and computer technology.JPL
12481 Streuvels 1997 EW47 Stijn Streuvels, Flemish writer
12482 Pajka 1997 FG1 Paula Pravdová
12485 Jenniferharris 1997 GO1 Jennifer Harris Trosper (b. 1968) led the Mars Pathfinder Surface Operations Test program and was Flight Director for Mars Pathfinder when it landed on 1997 July 4.JPL
12490 Leiden 1997 JB13 Leiden, Netherlands, seat of the University of Leiden
12491 Musschenbroek 1997 JE15 Pieter van Musschenbroek, Dutch scientist, inventor of the Leyden jar
12492 Tanais 1997 JP16 Tanais, ancient Greek name of the Don river JPL
12493 Minkowski 1997 PM1 Hermann Minkowski, German mathematician*
12494 Doughamilton 1998 DH11 Douglas Peary Hamilton, American astronomer
12496 Ekholm 1998 FF9 Andreas Ekholm, astronomer, latterly of the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona*
12498 Dragesco 1998 FY14 Jean Dragesco, Romanian-born French astronomer
12500 Desngai 1998 FB49 Desmond Ngai (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his medicine and health project. JPL

12501–12600

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12501 Nord 1998 FL66 Ashley Lynne Nord (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her earth and space sciences project. JPL
12504 Nuest 1998 FS75 Jennifer Elizabeth Nuest (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her environmental science project. JPL
12506 Pariser 1998 FR108 Andrew Robert Pariser (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his engineering project. JPL
12509 Pathak 1998 FY117 Madhav Dilip Pathak (born 1987), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his behavioral and social sciences project. JPL
12511 Patil 1998 FQ121 Reshma Shivaputrappa Patil (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her gerontology project. JPL
12512 Split 1998 HW7 Split is the largest Dalmatian city and the second-largest urban center in Croatia. Located on the shores of the eastern Adriatic Sea, it is a vital link to the numerous surrounding islands. The historic city of Split is built around the "Palace of Diocletian", the world's best preserved Roman palace.JPL
12513 Niven 1998 HC20 Ivan M. Niven, Canadian-American mathematician
12514 Schommer 1998 HM26 Robert Schommer, an astronomer at Cerro Tololo InterAmerican Observatory. JPL
12515 Suiseki 1998 HE43 Literally "Water-Stone" in Japanese, Suiseki is the Japanese art form of stone appreciation. JPL
12517 Grayzeck 1998 HD52 Edwin John Grayzeck, American astronomer, Archive Manager, Small Bodies Node of the Planetary Data System, Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park
12519 Pullen 1998 HH55 Sarah Adele Pullen (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her microbiology project. JPL
12522 Rara 1998 HL99 Prem Vilas Fortran M. Rara, Filipino winner of the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) +
12524 Conscience 1998 HG103 Hendrik Conscience (1812–1883), a founder of Flemish literature. JPL
12526 de Coninck 1998 HZ147 Herman de Coninck (1944–1997), a Flemish poet and critic. JPL
12527 Anneraugh 1998 JE3 Anne C. Raugh, American astronomer
12529 Reighard 1998 KG41 Chelsea Lynne Reighard (born 1986), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her biochemistry project. JPL
12530 Richardson 1998 KO46 Aaron Cole Richardson (born 1984), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his botany project. JPL
12533 Edmond 1998 LA Edmond, a city in central Oklahoma, was founded on 1889 Apr. 22 in the first of the Oklahoma land runs. JPL
12534 Janhoet 1998 LB3 Jan Hoet, founder of the Museum of Contemporary Art (Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (SMAK)) in Ghent and Artistic Director of the Marta Museum in Herford, Germany*
12537 Kendriddle 1998 MT34 Kendra LeeAnn Riddle (born 1983), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her engineering project. JPL
12539 Chaikin 1998 OP2 Andrew L. Chaikin (born 1956), a renowned author and space historian whose interests include the Apollo program. His landmark book A Man on the Moon served as the basis for the HBO miniseries From the Earth to the Moon, which dramatized the first lunar exploration. JPL
12540 Picander 1998 OU9 Picander, pseudonym of Christian Friedrich Henrici (1700–1764), was one of Bach's most important librettists. JPL
12541 Makarska 1998 PD1 Makarska is a town located on a horseshoe-shaped bay between the Biokovo mountains and the Adriatic Sea in the Croatian region of Dalmatia. It is the center of the Makarska riviera and noted for its palm-fringed promenade. Its Franciscan monastery houses a renowned seashell collection.JPL
12542 Laver 1998 PN1 Rodney Laver (born 1938), a tennis player from the discoverer's home state of Queensland and widely regarded as one of the greats of the game. JPL
12548 Erinriley 1998 QJ25 Erin Kathleen Riley (born 1983), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her physics project. JPL
12553 Aaronritter 1998 QZ46 Aaron M. Ritter (born 1986), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his earth and space sciences project. JPL
12556 Kyrobinson 1998 QG48 Kylan Thomas Robinson (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his engineering project. JPL
12557 Caracol 1998 QQ54 "El Caracol" at Chichén Itza in Yucatán, Mexico, has been described as probably the most famous of all the astronomically related buildings in ancient Mesoamerica. JPL
12561 Howard 1998 SX7 Ron Howard American Actor, director, producer. JPL
12562 Briangrazer 1998 SP36 Brian Grazer American Producer. JPL
12564 Ikeller 1998 SO49 Ingeborg Bickel-Keller (born 1941), the discoverer’s wife. JPL
12565 Khege 1998 SV53 Keith Hege (born 1932), of Steward Observatory, University of Arizona, is an expert in high angular resolution astronomy and instrumentation. JPL
12566 Derichardson 1998 SH54 Derek Charles Richardson, Canadian astrophysicist
12567 Herreweghe 1998 SU71 Philippe Herreweghe, Belgian conductor. JPL
12568 Kuffner 1998 VB5 Moriz von Kuffner(in German), Austrian brewer, alpinist and founder of the Kuffner Observatory(in German) in Vienna JPL
12572 Sadegh 1999 NN8 Cameron Sadegh (born 1984), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his chemistry project. JPL
12574 LONEOS 1999 RT Lowell Observatory Near-Earth-Object Search (LONEOS). JPL
12575 Palmaria 1999 RH1 Palmaria is the most important island in the gulf of La Spezia, famous for its old quarry of a rare golden marble nicknamed "Portoro". JPL
12576 Oresme 1999 RP1 Nicole Oresme(c. 1323 – 1382), bishop of Lisieux, conceived the representation of time-varying quantities by two-dimensional graphs, using the latitude-longitude analogy. JPL
12577 Samra 1999 RA13 Shamsher Singh Samra (born 1986), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his earth and space sciences project. JPL
12578 Bensaur 1999 RF17 Benjamin Paul Saur (born 1983), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his physics project. JPL
12579 Ceva 1999 RA28 The brothers Giovanni (1647–1734) and Tommaso (1648–1737) Ceva were Italian mathematicians interested in geometry and physics. JPL
12580 Antonini 1999 RM33 Pierre Antonini is a retired mathematics professor who has discovered many minor planets and a supernova at his private observatory, using first a 16-cm telescope, now a 30-cm telescope. JPL
12581 Rovinj 1999 RE34 Rovinj is a city on the western coast of the Istrian peninsula. It was initially built on an island but connected to the mainland in the eighteenth century. Saint Euphemia's basilica overlooks the medieval city and its 22 offshore islands.JPL
12583 Buckjean 1999 RC35 Named for the discoverer's father, a railroad conductor, and his mother, a registered nurse. JPL
12584 Zeljkoandreic 1999 RF36 Željko Andreić (born 1957), a renowned Croatian amateur astronomer and promoter of astronomy. JPL
12585 Katschwarz 1999 RN64 Kathleen Alice Schwarz (born 1984), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her environmental science project. JPL
12593 Shashlov 1999 RQ136 Anthon Michailovich Shashlov (born 1986), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his computer science project. JPL
12595 Amandashaw 1999 RD149 Amanda Bryce Shaw (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her mathematics project. JPL
12596 Shukla 1999 RT154 Kavita M. Shukla (born 1984), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her biochemistry project. JPL
12598 Sierra 1999 RC159 Elizabeth Sierra (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her biochemistry project. JPL
12599 Singhal 1999 RT160 Akshat Singhal (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his computer science project. JPL

12601–12700

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12601 Tiffanyswann 1999 RO178 Tiffany Nichole Swann (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her botany project. JPL
12602 Tammytam 1999 RT183 Tammy Tam (born 1985), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her biochemistry project. JPL
12603 Tanchunghee 1999 RF184 Tan Chun Ghee (born 1984), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his chemistry project. JPL
12604 Lisatate 1999 RC194 Lisa Michelle Tate (born 1986), a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her behavioral and social sciences project. JPL
12606 Apuleius 2043 P-L Lucius Apuleius, 2nd-century Roman writer and orator JPL
12607 Alcaeus 2058 P-L Alcaeus, 7th-6th-century B.C. Greek poet JPL
12608 Aesop 2091 P-L Aesop (Herodotus Aisopos of Sardes), 6th-century B.C. Greek slave who won his freedom with his fine fables JPL
12609 Apollodoros 2155 P-L Apollodoros of Athens, 2nd-century B.C. Greek scholar and stoic, author of a much used Chronika JPL
12610 Hãfez 2551 P-L Schamsoddin Mohammed Hãfez, 14th-century Persian poet JPL
12611 Ingres 2555 P-L Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, 18th-19th-century French painter JPL
12612 Daumier 2592 P-L Honoré Daumier, 19th-century French painter and lithographer JPL
12613 Hogarth 4024 P-L William Hogarth, 18th-century English painter and copper-plate engraver JPL
12614 Hokusai 4119 P-L Katsushika Hokusai, 18th-19th-century Japanese wood-carver and painter JPL
12615 Mendesdeleon 4626 P-L Pablo Mendes de Leon (b. 1954) has directed the International Institute of Air and Space Law since its creation in 1985 and is a recognized expert in the field. He was recently appointed professor of Air and Space Law at the University of Leiden and delivered his inaugural lecture on 2009 Apr. 17.JPL
12616 Lochner 4874 P-L Stephan Lochner, 15th-century German painter of the Cologne school JPL
12617 Angelusilesius 5568 P-L Angelus Silesius (Johannes Scheffler), 17th-century German baroque poet JPL
12618 Cellarius 6217 P-L Andreas Cellarius (c. 1596-1665), a German schoolmaster from Neuhausen near Worms, settled in Amsterdam in the early 1620s, becoming rector of the Latin School in Hoorn in 1637. His Harmonia Macrocosmica, published 1660 in Amsterdam, ranks amongst the most spectacular celestial atlases of the seventeenth century.JPL
12619 Anubelshunu 6242 P-L Anu Belshunu (249 B.C.-c. 185 B.C.) was lamentation priest and interpreter of the astrological omen series Enuma Anu Enlil at the Temple of Anu in Uruk. A collection of astrological cuneiform tablets from his library contains some of the earliest realistic depictions of the Babylonian constellations.JPL
12620 Simaqian 6335 P-L Sima Qian (c. 145 B.C.-c. 85 B.C.) was a Chinese historian, counselor and court astrologer of the Han emperor Wu Di. He wrote a treatise on the Chinese calendar. His Shiji ("Records of the Grand Historian") contains the earliest systematical description of the Chinese constellations.JPL
12621 Alsufi 6585 P-L The Persian astronomer Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (Azophi; 903-986) worked in Isfahan. His influential star atlas, completed around 964 and based on both Ptolemy's Almagest and pre-Islamic star lore, contains the earliest description of the Andromeda Galaxy, M 31.JPL
12622 Doppelmayr 6614 P-L German mathematician, astronomer and cartographer Johann Gabriel Doppelmayr (1677-1750) worked in Nürnberg. His Atlas Coelestis, published in 1742, was one of the major celestial atlases of the eighteenth century.JPL
12623 Tawaddud 9544 P-L A fictional character from the Arabian or 1001 Nights, Tawaddud was a talented slave-girl from Baghdad whose knowledge of astronomy, medicine and theology was superior to that of the best scholars in the court of Caliph Harun al-Rashid (who ruled from 786 to 809). The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12624 Mariacunitia 9565 P-L Maria Cunitia (c. 1604-1664), the daughter of a Polish physician, taught herself astronomy, mathematics, medicine and history. In 1650 she published the Urania Propitia, a collection of astronomical tables based on Kepler's Rudolphine Tables. The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12625 Koopman 9578 P-L Elizabetha Koopman (1647-1693), daughter of a Dutch merchant, was the second wife of Polish astronomer Johannes Hevelius. She assisted her husband with his astronomical observations, and after his death in 1687 she prepared his star atlas and catalogue for publication. The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12626 Timmerman 1116 T-1 Dutch poetess Petronella Johanna de Timmerman (1724-1786) was educated in astronomy and mathematics at the observatory of Jan de Munck in Middelburg. In 1769 she married the Utrecht astronomer Jan Frederik Hennert and assisted him in his work. The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12627 Maryedwards 1230 T-1 Mary Edwards (c. 1750-1815), of Ludlow, Shropshire, was a skillful mathematical and astronomical computer. From 1773 until her death she performed most of the astronomical computations necessary for the preparation of the Nautical Almanac. The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12628 Ackworthorr 2120 T-1 Mary Ackworth Orr (1867-1949), wife of the solar physicist and Kodaikanal Observatory director John Evershed, in 1913 published a detailed study of the numerous astronomical allusions in the works of the Italian poet Dante Alighieri. The name was suggested by R. H. van Gent.JPL
12629 Jandeboer 2168 T-1 Jan Allard de Boer (b. 1943) has been secretary of the Royal Dutch amateur society for meteorology and astronomy (NVWS) since 1995. He has done much to initiate contact between amateurs and professionals. Name suggested by A. v. d. Brugge and H. van Woerden.JPL
12630 Verstappen 3033 T-1 René Verstappen (b. 1948) has been comptroller of the Dutch center for dissemination of information on astronomy, space science and meteorology for 36 years. He has done much for Dutch amateur astronomers. Name suggested by A. v. d. Brugge and H. van Woerden.JPL
12631 Mariekebaan 3051 T-1 Marieke Baan (born 1961), a Dutch public information officer. JPL
12632 Mignonette 3105 T-1 Mignonette Saavedra (born 1931), Chilean psychologist. JPL
12633 Warmenhoven 3119 T-1 Adrie Warmenhoven (born 1961), Dutch astronomy popularizer and educator. JPL
12634 LOFAR 3178 T-1 LOFAR (LOw-Frequency ARray), a novel radio telescope, proposed by Leiden astronomer George Miley and inaugurated in 2010. JPL
12635 Hennylamers 4220 T-1 Henny Lamers, Dutch astrophysicist. JPL
12636 Padrielli 4854 T-1 Lucia Padrielli, Italian radio-astronomer. JPL
12637 Gustavleonhardt 1053 T-2 Gustav Leonhardt (1928–2012), Dutch harpsichord player and conductor. JPL
12638 Fransbrüggen 1063 T-2 Frans Brüggen (b. 1934) is a Dutch recorder player and conductor. He was the founder of the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century, which is dedicated to performing classical music as authentically as possible. In 2012 he was awarded the Edison Classical Music Award.JPL
12639 Tonkoopman 1105 T-2 Ton Koopman (b. 1944) is a Dutch harpsichord player and conductor, specializing in Baroque music. He founded the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra in 1979, and the Amsterdam Baroque Choir in 1993. With these ensembles, he has given renowned performances of Bach's St. Matthew's Passion.JPL
12640 Reinbertdeleeuw 1231 T-2 Reinbert de Leeuw, Dutch conductor, pianist and composer. JPL
12641 Hubertushenrichs 1310 T-2 Hubertus Frederik Henrichs (born 1949), a Dutch astronomer. JPL
12642 Davidjansen 1348 T-2 David Jona Jansen (born 1968), a Dutch astronomer in Leiden. JPL
12643 Henkolthof 3180 T-2 Henk Olthof (born 1944), a Dutch astronomer from Groningen. JPL
12644 Robertwielinga 3285 T-2 Robert Wielinga (born 1962), a Dutch physics teacher, active amateur astronomer and popularizer of astronomy. JPL
12645 Jacobrosales 4240 T-2 Named for Jacob Rosales (b. 1967) of Jalisco, Mexico, and his son, Jacob (Coby) Rosales Chase (b. 1996) by Daniel W. E. Green, a close family friend. Jacob senior is an expert musician and teacher, specializing in violin and other stringed instruments; Coby is a student at Case Western Reserve University. JPL
12646 Avercamp 5175 T-2 Dutch painter Hendrick Avercamp (1585-1634) specialized in painting the Netherlands in winter during the time that is now known as the Little Ice Age. Many of Avercamp's paintings feature people ice skating on frozen lakes. Name suggested by W. A. Fröger.JPL
12647 Pauluspotter 5332 T-2 Paulus Potter (1625-1654) was a Dutch Golden Age painter who painted mostly farm scenes and animals. His realistic paintings put the animals in the forefront so they contrasted against the background and give them a lively appearance. His most famous painting is The Young Bull (c. 1647). Name suggested by W. A. Fröger.JPL
12649 Ascanios 2035 T-3 Ascanios, the son of Aeneas. JPL
12657 Bonch-Bruevich 1971 QO1 Aleksej Mikhajlovich Bonch-Bruevich (born 1916), a corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Sciences. JPL
12658 Peiraios 1973 SL Peiraios, son of Klytios, was a friend of Telemachos. JPL
12659 Schlegel 1973 UR5 The brothers August Wilhelm (1767–1845) and Friedrich (1772–1829) Schlegel, both famous writers, philologists and teachers at the University of Jena. JPL
12661 Schelling 1976 DA1 Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling (1775–1854), professor of philosophy in University of Jena. JPL
12664 Sonisenia 1978 SS5 Sonya (Sofiya) and Senya (Semen) are charming and talented children of Mark Ziselevich Orlovskij, Kiev journalist, executive in the publishing trade and friend of the discoverer. JPL
12670 Passargea 1979 SG2 Michael Paul Oskar Passarge (born 1950), a prominent German amateur astronomer. JPL
12671 Thörnqvist 1980 FU Owe Thörnqvist (born 1929), a singer-songwriter who has written a large number of songs, many about life in Uppsala, where he was born. JPL
12672 Nygårdh 1980 FY2 Hans Cristian Nygårdh (b. 1950) is one of the most prolific compilers of cross-words in Sweden. JPL
12673 Kiselman 1980 FH3 Dan Kiselman (b. 1963), a solar physicist, who was for many years the secretary of the Swedish Astronomical Society. JPL
12674 Rybalka 1980 RL2 Anatolij Nikolaevich Rybalka (born 1939), an obstetrician and gynaecologist, professor at the Crimean Medical University. JPL
12675 Chabot 1980 TA4 Anthony Chabot (1813–1888), one of the pioneering hydraulic engineers of the late nineteenth century and a developer of municipal water facilities. JPL
12680 Bogdanovich 1981 JR2 Carrie C. L. Bogdanovich, American amateur astronomer who assisted in organizing the Palomar Observatory's 1.2-m Schmidt Oschin Telescope plate archive JPL
12682 Kawada 1982 VC3 Kawada Oukou (1830–1896), a Japanese classical scholar born in Tamashima, Okayama prefecture. JPL
12686 Bezuglyj 1986 TT11 Michail Yur'evich Bezuglyj (born 1963), a Ukrainian surgeon. JPL
12687 de Valory 1987 YS1 Guy Louis Henri, Marquis de Valory, 18th-century French aristocrat, friend of Voltaire and ambassador for the Prussian King Frederic II JPL
12688 Baekeland 1988 CK4 Leo Baekeland, Belgian-American chemist
12690 Kochimiraikagaku 1988 VG1 Kochi-Mirai-Kagakukan (Kochi city future science museum) is to be built in the heart of the city and will open in 2017. It will be equipped with a planetarium and is expected to play a role for astronomy education for children.JPL
12694 Schleiermacher 1989 EJ6 Friedrich Daniel Ernst Schleiermacher (1768–1834), German philosopher and Protestant theologian. JPL
12695 Utrecht 1989 GR3 Utrecht, the seat of the University of Utrecht
12696 Camus 1989 SF1 Albert Camus, French novelist and essayist. JPL
12697 Verhaeren 1989 SK3 Émile Verhaeren, the Belgian poet. JPL

12701–12800

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12701 Chénier 1990 GE André Chénier (1762–1794), a French poet who died on the scaffold. JPL
12702 Panamarenko 1990 SR6 Panamarenko (Henri Van Herwegen, b. 1940) is a famous Belgian artist. JPL
12704 Tupolev 1990 SL28 Andrey Nikolaevich Tupolev (1888–1972), a known worldwide as an airplane designer. JPL
12708 Van Straten 1990 UB4 Henri van Straten (1892–1944), a Belgium greatest lithographers. JPL
12709 Bergen op Zoom 1990 VN4 Berg op Zoom, Netherlands JPL
12710 Breda 1990 VQ5 Breda, Netherlands JPL
12711 Tukmit 1991 BB Tukmit, Father Sky in the Luiseno creation story, who with Tomaiyavit bore the First People JPL
12714 Alkimos 1991 GX1 Akimos, mythological son of Ares, who was, together with Automedon, in charge of Achilles' horses during the Trojan War JPL
12715 Godin 1991 GR2 Louis Godin, 18th-century French astronomer who proposed to send expeditions to the equator and the polar sea to measure in both places an arc of one degree in order to find out the true shape of the Earth; in 1753 he joined La Condamine and Bouguer on an expedition to Peru to do this very thing JPL
12716 Delft 1991 GD8 Delft, Netherlands JPL
12718 Le Gentil 1991 LF1 Guillaume-Joseph Le Gentil (1725–1792), a French astronomer. JPL
12719 Pingré 1991 LP2 Alexandre-Guy Pingré (1711–1796), a French astronomer. JPL
12722 Petrarca 1991 PT1 Francesco Petrarca (1304–1374), an Italian poet. JPL
12727 Cavendish 1991 PB20 Henry Cavendish (1731–1810), a British eccentric and a physicist. JPL
12729 Berger 1991 RL7 Hans Berger (1873–1941), a German medical doctor. JPL
12734 Haruna 1991 UF3 Haruna Takahashi (born 1994), the eldest daughter of the first discoverer. JPL
12738 Satoshimiki 1992 AL Satoshi Hayakawa (born 1992) and Miki Hayakawa (born 1995) are children of the second discoverer and partners in his observations. JPL
12742 Delisle 1992 OF1 Joseph-Nicolas Delisle (1688–1768), a French astronomer. JPL
12746 Yumeginga 1992 WC1 The name Yumeginga is derived from the nickname of the Space and Science Museum in Takeo, Saga prefecture. "Yume" means "dream", and "ginga" means "galaxy". Yumeginga will be celebrating its tenth anniversary in July 2009.JPL
12747 Michageffert 1992 YN2 Michael Geffert (b. 1953) is a German astrometrist at Bonn University working on the precession of stars in globular clusters. He has done valuable work on the Hipparcos input catalog. A member of a well-known musical family, he also occupies himself successfully with musical performance and drawing.JPL, Src
12750 Berthollet 1993 DJ1 Claude-Louis Berthollet (1748–1822), a French chemist. JPL
12751 Kamihayashi 1993 EU Kamihayashi, Niigata prefecture, Japan JPL
12752 Kvarnis 1993 FR35 Kvarnis is the nickname of a school in Uppsala's Kvarngärdet district which hosts a scale model of the Saturnian moon Enceladus, as part of Sweden's Solar System.JPL
12753 Povenmire 1993 HE Hal and Katie Povenmire
12755 Balmer 1993 OS10 Johann J. Balmer (1825–1898), a Swiss mathematician. JPL
12757 Yangtze 1993 RY11 Yangtze River, China. JPL
12758 Kabudari 1993 SM3 Kabudari ("big tree" in Arawak), a native name from Palavecino, Lara, Venezuela JPL
12759 Joule 1993 TL18 James Joule (1818–1889), an English physicist. JPL
12760 Maxwell 1993 TX26 James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879), a Scottish mathematician and physicist. JPL
12761 Pauwels 1993 TP38 Thierry Pauwels (born 1958), an astrometrist at the Royal Observatory at Uccle. JPL
12762 Nadiavittor 1993 UE1 Nadia Vittor, aunt of Alberto Toso, one of the discoverers
12766 Paschen 1993 VV4 Louis Paschen (1865–1947), a German physicist and an outstanding spectroscopist. JPL
12769 Kandakurenai 1994 FF Kurenai Kanda, Japanese actress and professional storyteller, member of the executive board of the Japan Space Forum. JPL
12771 Kimshin 1994 GA1 Kim Shin, Japanese musician and synthesizer performer, whose compact disc Everlasting Space traveled into space with the shuttle Discovery in 2000 JPL
12773 Lyman 1994 PJ10 Theodore Lyman (1874–1954), an American physicist. JPL
12774 Pfund 1994 PH22 August Hermann Pfund (1879–1949), an American physicist and professor of optics at Baltimore University. JPL
12775 Brackett 1994 PX22 Frederick Sumner Brackett (1896–1972), an U.S. physicist. JPL
12776 Reynolds 1994 PT31 Osbourne Reynolds (1842–1912), a British engineer and physicist. JPL
12777 Manuel 1994 QA1 Manuel Antolini (1959–2002), the son of the first discoverer. JPL
12780 Salamony 1995 CE1 Sandra Noel Salamony, American creative director for Sky Publishing (Sky & Telescope, Night Sky, Beautiful Universe) JPL
12782 Mauersberger 1995 ED9 Brothers Rudolf (1889–1971) and Erhard (1903–1982) Mauersberger were renowned German musicians and choirmasters. JPL
12787 Abetadashi 1995 SR3 Tadashi Abe, Japanese amateur astronomer JPL
12788 Shigeno 1995 SZ3 Toramatsu Shigeno, Japanese amateur astronomer, and the discoverer's father-in-law JPL
12789 Salvadoraguirre 1995 TX Salvador Aguirre (b. 1952) is an avid amateur astronomer from Hermosillo, Mexico. He has conducted many observations of variable stars, asteroid occultations, meteors and comets. He has also helped popularize and coordinate amateur astronomical research within Mexico.JPL
12790 Cernan 1995 UT2 Eugene Andrew Cernan, American astronaut
12793 Hosinokokai 1995 UP8 Hoshinokokai is a star-loving group that has been working voluntarily for 20 years at the astronomical observatory on Tawara Junior High School in Utsunomiya City, Tochigi Prefecture. JPL
12796 Kamenrider 1995 WF Kamen Rider, a Japanese TV character. JPL
12799 von Suttner 1995 WF6 Bertha Félicie Sophie von Suttner, Austrian peace activist and Nobelist
12800 Oobayashiarata 1995 WQ7 Arata Oobayashi (1957–1999), a Japanese amateur astronomer and computer engineer. JPL

12801–12900

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12801 Somekawa 1995 XD Somekawa Shuichi (1962-1997) was a Japanese amateur astronomer and optical engineer. The name was suggested by M. Namiki.JPL
12802 Hagino 1995 XD1 Japanese amateur astronomer Hagino Akira (1949-1999) died in a tragic accident while observing. He worked as an instructor of popular astronomy at a small astronomical facility in Yamanashi prefecture and inspired many children and visitors with interests in the wonderful night sky.JPL
12810 Okumiomote 1996 BV Okumiomote (奥三面), northern Niigata prefecture, Japan, archaeological site submerged by the damming of a river in 2000 JPL
12811 Rigonistern 1996 CL7 Mario Rigoni Stern, Italian author*
12812 Cioni 1996 CN7 Giovanni Cioni (1943-2002) was an amateur astronomer of the Montelupo Group.JPL
12813 Paolapaolini 1996 CU8 Paola Paolini (1947-2002) was the wife of Mauro Gherardini, amateur astronomer of the Montelupo Group.JPL
12814 Vittorio 1996 CG9 Vittorio Beltrami (b. 1926) continuously promoted, supported and encouraged scientific and technological initiatives, in particular at the Belgirate Asteroids-Comets-Meteors Congress in 1993, and also during international events involving space and astronomy, with special attention to minor bodies of the solar system.JPL
12817 Federica 1996 FM16 Federica Mula (b. 1995) is the talented daughter of Manuela Sciascia and Nuccio Mula. In the opera Empedocle from Mula-Portera (Agrigento, 2002), she performed the role of the girl who found and returned the sandal of Greek philosopher Empedocles near the Etna volcano.JPL
12818 Tomhanks 1996 GU8 Tom Hanks, American actor*
12819 Susumutakahasi 1996 JO Susumu Takahasi (b. 1958), director of the Dynic Astronomical Observatory "Tenkyukan", is ardent about astronomical education and a fine observer of variable stars.JPL
12820 Robinwilliams 1996 JN6 Robin Williams, American actor*
12828 Batteas 1997 AU9 Frank Batteas (b. 1955) is a pilot for the F/A-18 and C-17 flight research projects at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California. He has accumulated more than 4700 hours of flight experience in more than 40 different types of aircraft.JPL
12833 Kamenný Újezd 1997 CV1 Kamenný Újezd, village in Czech Republic
12834 Bomben 1997 CB13 Craig R. Bomben (b. 1962) is a pilot in the Flight Crew Branch of NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California. He has more than 17 years and 3800 hours of flight experience in over 50 different aircraft types.JPL
12835 Stropek 1997 CN13 Václav Stropek, technician at Kleť Observatory
12838 Adamsmith 1997 EL55 Adam Smith, 18th-century key figure of the Scottish Enlightenment, author of An Enquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations JPL
12840 Paolaferrari 1997 GR5 Paola Ferrari, Librarian of the town of San Marcello Pistoiese in Italy and contributor to the Pian dei Termini Observatory
12843 Ewers 1997 GH27 Dick Ewers, NASA pilot*
12845 Crick 1997 JM15 Francis Harry Compton Crick, OM, British physicist and biochemist*
12846 Fullerton 1997 MR C. Gordon Fullerton (b. 1936) is a research pilot at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California. With over 15~000 hours of flying time, he has piloted 135 different types of aircraft. He has logged 382 hours in space as a NASA astronaut, during two Space Shuttle missions.JPL
12848 Agostino 1997 NK10 Agostino Boattini (b. 1932) is the father of the discoverer.JPL
12850 Axelmunthe 1998 CO3 Axel Munthe (1857-1949), a descendant of a Flemish family that settled in Sweden during the sixteenth century, was a physician and writer who had studied neurology under Charcot. In his autobiographical The story of San Michele (1929), he portrayed the foibles of the rich and the poor in a tragicomic fashion.JPL
12852 Teply 1998 FW30 Grant Teply, American finalist, 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF)
12855 Tewksbury 1998 HS32 Carolyn Morgan Tewksbury, American finalist, 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF)*
12859 Marlamoore 1998 KK1 Marla Hoke Moore, American astronomer
12860 Turney 1998 KT32 Shannon Quinn Turney, American finalist, 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF)*
12861 Wacker 1998 KW33 David "Buzz" Wacker, American finalist, 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF)*
12863 Whitfield 1998 KE48 Meghan Elizabeth Whitfield (b. 1985) is a finalist in the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for her engineering project. She attends the Glen Rose High School, Benton, Arkansas, U.S.A.JPL
12866 Yanamadala 1998 KL65 Vijay Yanamadala, American finalist, 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF)*
12867 Joëloïc 1998 LK2 Joël (b. 1982) and Loïc (b. 1985) are the children of Gérard Faure, accountant, amateur astronomer and active Magnitude Alert Project observer of minor planets. Both sons are now students at the University of Grenoble, in the disciplines of economy and computer science.JPL
12868 Onken 1998 MZ7 Christopher S. Onken (b. 1979) was a summer student at the Lowell Observatory in 1998. As an observer, he made the first LONEOS near-earth-asteroid discovery and suggested many useful improvements to the observing protocol.JPL
12870 Rolandmeier 1998 MK37 Roland C. Meier (b. 1964), of Gretag Imaging, Zurich, is well known for his research on the chemistry of comets, ranging from studies of the chemistry observed in situ at 1P/Halley with Giotto to numerous optical and radio studies using ground-based telescopes. The name was suggested by M. F. A'Hearn.JPL
12871 Samarasinha 1998 ML37 Nalin Harsha Samarasinha, American astronomer
12872 Susiestevens 1998 OZ5 Susie Stevens, American teacher, 2002 winner of an Intel Foundation Excellence in Teaching Award*
12873 Clausewitz 1998 OU7 Carl von Clausewitz, Prussian general and military thinker*
12874 Poisson 1998 QZ Siméon Denis Poisson, French mathematician, geometer and physicist*
12878 Erneschiller 1998 QH11 Ernest Schiller, American teacher, 2002 winner of an Intel Foundation Excellence in Teaching Award*
12880 Juliegrady 1998 QM25 Julie Grady, American teacher, 2002 winner of an Intel Foundation Excellence in Teaching Award*
12881 Yepeiyu 1998 QF31 Ye Peiyu, Chinese teacher, 2002 winner of an Intel Foundation Excellence in Teaching Award*
12893 Mommert 1998 QS55 Michael Mommert (born 1982) has analysed Herschel and Spitzer space telescope observations of transneptunian and near-Earth objects, finding further evidence for links between these populations. He has provided insight into the physical properties of the Plutinos and the cometary component of the NEO population. JPL
12895 Balbastre 1998 QO99 Claude-Bénigme Balbastre (1729-1799) was a French composer who, after writing more-or-less academic organ work at Dijon, blossomed as a fashionable Parisian harpsichord teacher and cosmopolite. La Lugeac and La d´Héricourt rank among the very finest keyboard works of the 1750s.JPL
12896 Geoffroy 1998 QV102 Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, French naturalist, or Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, French zoologist, or, Henry Geoffroy, French painter*
12897 Bougeret 1998 RY5 Jean-Louis Bougeret, French astronomer*
12898 Mignard 1998 RK6 Either or both of the brothers Pierre and Nicolas Mignard, French painters*

12901–13000

Number–Name Prov. Designation Source of Name
12908 Yagudina 1998 SG25 Eleonora Ivanovna Yagudina (b. 1941) is a staff member at the Institute of Applied Astronomy of the Russian Academy of Sciences. She has worked extensively on the motions of solar system bodies, and devotes much of her time to educating young people in astronomy.JPL
12909 Jaclifford 1998 SK58 Jack Clifford (b. 1933), of Scottsdale, Arizona, is a pioneering cable television entrepreneur, avid amateur astronomer and a major contributor to numerous science and educational institutions. He has been of great service on the Lowell Trustee's Advisory Board, particularly in fund raising.JPL
12910 Deliso 1998 SP59 Joseph John Deliso (1906-1994), contractor, manufacturer, public servant and philanthropist, served many years as Chairman of the Trustees of Springfield Technical Community College, Massachusetts, and was a major endower of that institution. The name was suggested by W. L. Putnam.JPL
12911 Goodhue 1998 SQ59 Samuel Harlowe Goodhue (b. 1921), engineer and alpinist of Jackson, New Hampshire, was Chairman of the Trails Committee and then the Huts Committee for the Appalachian Mountain Club. He has been generous with his time and talents to both the Mount Washington (meteorological) and Lowell observatories.JPL
12912 Streator 1998 SR60 Streator, Illinois, was the home town of Clyde W. Tombaugh (1906-1997), discoverer of Pluto.JPL
12916 Eteoneus 1998 TL15 Eteoneus, son of Boethous, King Menelaus of Sparta's weapon-carrier during the Trojan War, who helped Odysseus in his attempts to return home JPL
12919 Tomjohnson 1998 VB6 Thomas J. Johnson (b. 1923) developed a technique for creating Schmidt telescope correctors that allowed the mass production of Schmidt-Cassegrain telescopes. In 1978 the Optical Society of America awarded him the David Richardson Medal for this work.JPL
12923 Zephyr 1999 GK4 The word zephyr derives from the name of the ancient Greek god of the west wind, Zephyros. The name was suggested by M. Smitherman.JPL
12926 Brianmason 1999 SO9 Brian Mason, New Zealand-born meteoriticist and lunar geologist (not to be confused with American astronomers Brian Dewitt Mason and Brian Scott Mason)
12927 Pinocchio 1999 SU9 Pinocchio, character from Carlo Collodi's eponymous tale
12928 Nicolapozio 1999 SV9 Nicola Pozio, accountant for the Spaceguard Foundation
12931 Mario 1999 TX10 Mario Sposetti, father of the discoverer
12932 Conedera 1999 TC12 Marina Conedera, wife of the discoverer
12934 Bisque 1999 TH16 Since 1984 Stephen (b. 1960), Thomas (b. 1963), Daniel (b. 1965) and Matthew (b. 1966) Bisque have been developing and distributing software and instrumentation for the astronomical community that completely automates telescope control and CCD image acquisition.JPL
12935 Zhengzhemin 1999 TV17 Zheng Zhemin (b. 1924), an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Engineering and a foreign academician of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering, is one of the founders of the field of explosion mechanics. A leader of the field of mechanics in China, he has proposed and created new branches of mechanics.JPL
12972 Eumaios 1973 SF1 Eumaios was the pig herder of Odysseus. When Odysseus returned to Ithaca, Eumaios helped him to conquer the suitors of Penelope.JPL
12973 Melanthios 1973 SY1 Melanthios was a goat herder of Odysseus. He mocked Odysseus when the latter came to Eumaios disguised as a beggar. Later Odysseus killed him.JPL
12974 Halitherses 1973 SB2 Halitherses was an augur in Ithaca. He went together with Telemachos to search for Odysseus. He was also a friend of Odysseus himself.JPL
12975 Efremov 1973 SY5 Yurij Nikolaevich Efremov, Russian astronomer JPL
12976 Kalinenkov 1976 QK1 Nikifor Dmitrievich Kalinenkov (1924-1996) was professor of physics and astronomy at the Nikolaev State Pedagogical Institute in Ukraine. He was the first director of the Institute's astronomical observatory and contributed much to its instrumentation through "make-it-yourself" telescopes and other devices.JPL
12978 Ivashov 1978 SD7 Vladimir Sergeevich Ivashov (1939-1995) was a People's artist of Russia who created a striking image of a defender of the motherland in the film Ballad about a soldier produced by Grigorij Chukhraj.JPL
12979 Evgalvasil'ev 1978 SB8 Evgenij Aleksandrovich Vasil'ev, Ukrainian educator, creator of the Artek pioneer camp "Lesnoj" in Crimea JPL
12984 Lowry 1979 QF2 Stephen C. Lowry, Irish astronomer
12999 Toruń 1981 QJ2 Toruń, Poland, birthplace of Nicolas Copernicus, whose Old Town is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and whose university houses the largest observatory in Poland JPL

References

  1. Schmadel, Lutz D. (2003). Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. ISBN 978-3-540-00238-3. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  2. Schmadel, Lutz D. (2006). Dictionary of Minor Planet Names – Addendum to Fifth Edition: 2003–2005. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. ISBN 978-3-540-34360-8. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  3. "MPC/MPO/MPS Archive". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
Preceded by
11,001–12,000
Meanings of minor planet names
List of minor planets: 12,001–13,000
Succeeded by
13,001–14,000
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