Frank B. Zoltowski | |
---|---|
Born | 1957 Pennsylvania |
Years active | 1997-2003 |
Known for | discovery of minor planets |
Parent(s) | Frank Zoltowski, Constance Zoltowski |
see § List of discovered minor planets |
Frank B. Zoltowski (born 1957) is an Australian amateur astronomer and prolific discoverer of minor planets who lives in Woomera, South Australia. In 1998, he was awarded a "Gene Shoemaker NEO Grant" for improved near-Earth object searches. [2] [3]
Zoltowski conducts these searches from his home with a charge-coupled device camera. [2] He is a prolific discoverer of asteroids. He authored CCDTRACK, a computer program that auto-guides electronically controlled telescopes by tracking a user-selected celestial object.
He is mentioned in NASA's asteroid tracking database as an observer for asteroid (285263) 1998 QE2 . [4] Astronomers at the Minor Planet Center used Zoltowski's work to work out an estimated approach distance for (137108) 1999 AN10 of 56,500 kilometers, and a closest approach date of Aug 7, 2027. [5] It was thought to potentially crash into Earth. [6] [7] [8]
The main-belt asteroid 18292 Zoltowski, discovered at the George R. Agassiz Station of the Harvard College Observatory in 1977, was named in his honor. [3] The naming citation was published on 9 May 2001 ( M.P.C. 42676). [9]
Frank Zoltowski is credited by the Minor Planet Center for the discovery of 228 numbered minor planets between 1997 and 2003. [1]
8430 Florey | 25 December 1997 | list |
10203 Flinders | 1 August 1997 | list |
11150 Bragg | 21 December 1997 | list |
11195 Woomera | 15 January 1999 | list |
11212 Tebbutt | 18 April 1999 | list |
11356 Chuckjones | 18 December 1997 | list |
12102 Piazzolla | 5 May 1998 | list |
(12103) 1998 KL | 19 May 1998 | list |
(12495) 1998 FJ | 18 March 1998 | list |
(12518) 1998 HM52 | 27 April 1998 | list |
(12543) 1998 QM5 | 23 August 1998 | list |
(12899) 1998 RN13 | 1 September 1998 | list |
(12922) 1998 WW19 | 27 November 1998 | list |
(13296) 1998 RV | 11 September 1998 | list |
(13742) 1998 SX22 | 23 September 1998 | list |
(13776) 1998 UK1 | 19 October 1998 | list |
(14169) 1998 UZ24 | 25 October 1998 | list |
(14204) 1999 AM20 | 12 January 1999 | list |
(14530) 1997 PR | 1 August 1997 | list |
(14536) 1997 RY2 | 3 September 1997 | list |
(14557) 1997 VG8 | 15 November 1997 | list |
(14592) 1998 SV22 | 20 September 1998 | list |
(14991) 1997 UV14 | 31 October 1997 | list |
(15043) 1998 XW9 | 11 December 1998 | list |
(15383) 1997 SE3 | 21 September 1997 | list |
(15410) 1997 YZ | 19 December 1997 | list |
(15475) 1999 BQ14 | 24 January 1999 | list |
(15936) 1997 YM4 | 22 December 1997 | list |
(16916) 1998 FM15 | 27 March 1998 | list |
(16963) 1998 RE2 | 12 September 1998 | list |
(17227) 2000 CW80 | 11 February 2000 | list |
(17708) 1997 WB | 18 November 1997 | list |
(17750) 1998 DZ1 | 18 February 1998 | list |
(17775) 1998 FH | 18 March 1998 | list |
(17828) 1998 HK8 | 22 April 1998 | list |
(17854) 1998 JC4 | 5 May 1998 | list |
(17916) 1999 GZ3 | 10 April 1999 | list |
(18600) 1998 BK10 | 24 January 1998 | list |
(18757) 1999 HT | 18 April 1999 | list |
(19375) 1998 AB5 | 6 January 1998 | list |
(19387) 1998 DA2 | 18 February 1998 | list |
(19404) 1998 FO5 | 24 March 1998 | list |
(19471) 1998 HK52 | 25 April 1998 | list |
(19472) 1998 HL52 | 27 April 1998 | list |
(19505) 1998 MC | 16 June 1998 | list |
(19566) 1999 KO6 | 23 May 1999 | list |
(19579) 1999 MB1 | 23 June 1999 | list |
(20319) 1998 GK1 | 5 April 1998 | list |
(20365) 1998 KD5 | 24 May 1998 | list |
(20398) 1998 NQ | 11 July 1998 | list |
(20457) 1999 LX7 | 10 June 1999 | list |
(20463) 1999 MC1 | 23 June 1999 | list |
(20464) 1999 MD1 | 24 June 1999 | list |
(20619) 1999 SB10 | 30 September 1999 | list |
(21442) 1998 GF1 | 4 April 1998 | list |
(21567) 1998 RB2 | 1 September 1998 | list |
(22620) 1998 KZ26 | 23 May 1998 | list |
(22634) 1998 MN7 | 22 June 1998 | list |
(22636) 1998 MV13 | 25 June 1998 | list |
(22761) 1998 YH4 | 16 December 1998 | list |
(22770) 1999 BR14 | 24 January 1999 | list |
(23740) 1998 KP3 | 25 May 1998 | list |
(23793) 1998 QK26 | 23 August 1998 | list |
(23846) 1998 RF | 1 September 1998 | list |
(24958) 1997 SS31 | 28 September 1997 | list |
(25008) 1998 PL | 8 August 1998 | list |
(25009) 1998 PG1 | 15 August 1998 | list |
(25028) 1998 QL26 | 25 August 1998 | list |
(25839) 2000 ES50 | 11 March 2000 | list |
(26226) 1998 GJ1 | 4 April 1998 | list |
(26280) 1998 SW22 | 20 September 1998 | list |
(26354) 1998 YJ4 | 16 December 1998 | list |
(26980) 1997 UQ10 | 29 October 1997 | list |
(26983) 1997 VA | 1 November 1997 | list |
(27124) 1998 WA20 | 29 November 1998 | list |
(27166) 1999 AN20 | 12 January 1999 | list |
(27183) 1999 CF4 | 10 February 1999 | list |
(28029) 1998 DW9 | 20 February 1998 | list |
(28363) 1999 GN6 | 14 April 1999 | list |
(28372) 1999 HU | 18 April 1999 | list |
(29495) 1997 WU7 | 27 November 1997 | list |
(29739) 1999 BM9 | 16 January 1999 | list |
(29751) 1999 CE4 | 9 February 1999 | list |
(29752) 1999 CG4 | 10 February 1999 | list |
(29831) 1999 EV4 | 13 March 1999 | list |
(31350) 1998 SF2 | 17 September 1998 | list |
(31606) 1999 GX4 | 13 April 1999 | list |
(31668) 1999 JX3 | 6 May 1999 | list |
(33099) 1997 YN8 | 27 December 1997 | list |
(33178) 1998 FL15 | 27 March 1998 | list |
(33211) 1998 FG74 | 30 March 1998 | list |
(33286) 1998 KA | 16 May 1998 | list |
(33321) 1998 QL | 17 August 1998 | list |
(33533) 1999 HV3 | 19 April 1999 | list |
(33712) 1999 LE19 | 10 June 1999 | list |
(35480) 1998 FN5 | 24 March 1998 | list |
(35485) 1998 FZ14 | 24 March 1998 | list |
(35562) 1998 GL1 | 5 April 1998 | list |
(35622) 1998 JF4 | 5 May 1998 | list |
(35729) 1999 GZ4 | 13 April 1999 | list |
(35758) 1999 HE | 16 April 1999 | list |
(35759) 1999 HQ | 17 April 1999 | list |
(37819) 1998 BE5 | 20 January 1998 | list |
(37936) 1998 GH1 | 4 April 1998 | list |
(38209) 1999 NE | 4 July 1999 | list |
(38444) 1999 SY9 | 29 September 1999 | list |
(39889) 1998 FG | 17 March 1998 | list |
(40027) 1998 JH4 | 15 May 1998 | list |
(40100) 1998 PV | 12 August 1998 | list |
(40105) 1998 QL4 | 17 August 1998 | list |
(40170) 1998 RK | 1 September 1998 | list |
(42617) 1998 FJ1 | 20 March 1998 | list |
(44168) 1998 JJ4 | 15 May 1998 | list |
(44198) 1998 MP24 | 25 June 1998 | list |
(44308) 1998 RG | 1 September 1998 | list |
(44486) 1998 WZ19 | 29 November 1998 | list |
(46847) 1998 QM26 | 25 August 1998 | list |
(46918) 1998 SC | 16 September 1998 | list |
(48783) 1997 SR | 20 September 1997 | list |
(48787) 1997 SY4 | 26 September 1997 | list |
(48833) 1997 YA5 | 24 December 1997 | list |
(48899) 1998 MM7 | 17 June 1998 | list |
(48930) 1998 PW | 14 August 1998 | list |
(48937) 1998 QN4 | 21 August 1998 | list |
(49039) 1998 RH | 1 September 1998 | list |
(49042) 1998 RD2 | 12 September 1998 | list |
(49271) 1998 UG15 | 20 October 1998 | list |
(51280) 2000 KG4 | 24 May 2000 | list |
(52614) 1997 UP10 | 29 October 1997 | list |
(52618) 1997 VP2 | 4 November 1997 | list |
(52759) 1998 MW13 | 25 June 1998 | list |
(52771) 1998 PX | 14 August 1998 | list |
(53144) 1999 BN9 | 22 January 1999 | list |
(55867) 1997 RX2 | 3 September 1997 | list |
(55882) 1997 WY1 | 20 November 1997 | list |
(55899) 1998 BJ10 | 24 January 1998 | list |
(56044) 1998 XU17 | 15 December 1998 | list |
(56218) 1999 HP4 | 26 April 1999 | list |
(56278) 1999 KB | 16 May 1999 | list |
(58936) 1998 PJ1 | 13 August 1998 | list |
(59422) 1999 GD4 | 12 April 1999 | list |
(59423) 1999 GE4 | 12 April 1999 | list |
(59471) 1999 HP | 17 April 1999 | list |
(59758) 1999 MH | 18 June 1999 | list |
(59761) 1999 MZ | 23 June 1999 | list |
(60531) 2000 EF50 | 9 March 2000 | list |
(65958) 1998 GG1 | 4 April 1998 | list |
(66001) 1998 OG1 | 17 July 1998 | list |
(66279) 1999 JK11 | 12 May 1999 | list |
(69761) 1998 QM4 | 21 August 1998 | list |
(69844) 1998 SY22 | 23 September 1998 | list |
(70057) 1999 JJ11 | 12 May 1999 | list |
(70122) 1999 MX | 22 June 1999 | list |
(70123) 1999 ME1 | 24 June 1999 | list |
(70124) 1999 NY | 10 July 1999 | list |
(70220) 1999 RF44 | 13 September 1999 | list |
(70430) 1999 TM2 | 2 October 1999 | list |
(70432) 1999 TO3 | 3 October 1999 | list |
(71551) 2000 DW6 | 27 February 2000 | list |
(73992) 1998 FK1 | 20 March 1998 | list |
(74019) 1998 GY | 2 April 1998 | list |
(74026) 1998 HL8 | 22 April 1998 | list |
(74069) 1998 MO7 | 22 June 1998 | list |
(74078) 1998 NP | 3 July 1998 | list |
(74079) 1998 NS | 11 July 1998 | list |
(74121) 1998 QT53 | 28 August 1998 | list |
(74362) 1998 WY19 | 29 November 1998 | list |
(74534) 1999 JA | 1 May 1999 | list |
(75850) 2000 CC | 2 February 2000 | list |
(77958) 2002 HR10 | 21 April 2002 | list |
(79517) 1998 MD | 16 June 1998 | list |
(79518) 1998 MF3 | 16 June 1998 | list |
(80084) 1999 KN6 | 23 May 1999 | list |
(80692) 2000 CD | 2 February 2000 | list |
(84778) 2002 XP59 | 10 December 2002 | list |
(85481) 1997 OG1 | 27 July 1997 | list |
(85647) 1998 PZ | 14 August 1998 | list |
(85675) 1998 RC2 | 3 September 1998 | list |
(85971) 1999 GW5 | 15 April 1999 | list |
(90921) 1997 QP4 | 22 August 1997 | list |
(91112) 1998 HJ52 | 25 April 1998 | list |
(91401) 1999 MY | 22 June 1999 | list |
(91402) 1999 NW | 9 July 1999 | list |
(92489) 2000 MK | 24 June 2000 | list |
(96436) 1998 FS72 | 28 March 1998 | list |
(96722) 1999 LO4 | 10 June 1999 | list |
(99916) 1998 AA5 | 3 January 1998 | list |
(100898) 1998 JG4 | 15 May 1998 | list |
(101494) 1998 XD3 | 8 December 1998 | list |
(101859) 1999 LA | 2 June 1999 | list |
(104766) 2000 HG24 | 29 April 2000 | list |
(112050) 2002 JF9 | 7 May 2002 | list |
(114299) 2002 XL37 | 9 December 2002 | list |
(114392) 2002 YK7 | 31 December 2002 | list |
(118367) 1999 GC4 | 12 April 1999 | list |
(120853) 1998 QK4 | 17 August 1998 | list |
(121122) 1999 HW3 | 21 April 1999 | list |
(121233) 1999 RU36 | 10 September 1999 | list |
(121853) 2000 CT34 | 3 February 2000 | list |
(129770) 1999 HV | 18 April 1999 | list |
(129812) 1999 MA1 | 23 June 1999 | list |
(130611) 2000 SP23 | 26 September 2000 | list |
(137241) 1999 RV36 | 11 September 1999 | list |
(138118) 2000 EA4 | 1 March 2000 | list |
(138142) 2000 EE50 | 9 March 2000 | list |
(145989) 2000 BL15 | 30 January 2000 | list |
(150179) 1998 FN15 | 27 March 1998 | list |
(152757) 1999 JL11 | 12 May 1999 | list |
(164767) 1998 YK4 | 18 December 1998 | list |
(175739) 1998 JL4 | 5 May 1998 | list |
(175741) 1998 MQ24 | 26 June 1998 | list |
(176996) 2003 AW16 | 5 January 2003 | list |
(182133) 2000 SO23 | 26 September 2000 | list |
(192630) 1999 LL | 5 June 1999 | list |
(200154) 1998 RJ | 1 September 1998 | list |
(210510) 1998 NR | 11 July 1998 | list |
(216924) 1998 QV53 | 26 August 1998 | list |
(217231) 2003 BY46 | 31 January 2003 | list |
(234069) 1999 OA | 16 July 1999 | list |
(234144) 2000 ET50 | 11 March 2000 | list |
(234714) 2002 JX67 | 11 May 2002 | list |
(257573) 1999 CH4 | 10 February 1999 | list |
(257848) 2000 MJ | 24 June 2000 | list |
(259171) 2003 AB | 1 January 2003 | list |
(269858) 2000 EB4 | 4 March 2000 | list |
(285280) 1998 SF28 | 24 September 1998 | list |
(344573) 2003 AV16 | 5 January 2003 | list |
(461350) 1998 PY | 14 August 1998 | list |
(483407) 1999 SL|1 | 16 September 1999* | list |
A near-Earth object (NEO) is any small Solar System body whose orbit brings it into proximity with Earth. By convention, a Solar System body is a NEO if its closest approach to the Sun (perihelion) is less than 1.3 astronomical units (AU). If a NEO's orbit crosses the Earth's orbit, and the object is larger than 140 meters (460 ft) across, it is considered a potentially hazardous object (PHO). Most known PHOs and NEOs are asteroids, but a small fraction are comets.
The Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) project is a collaboration of the United States Air Force, NASA, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Lincoln Laboratory for the systematic detection and tracking of near-Earth objects. LINEAR was responsible for the majority of asteroid discoveries from 1998 until it was overtaken by the Catalina Sky Survey in 2005. As of 15 September 2011, LINEAR had detected 231,082 new small Solar System bodies, of which at least 2,423 were near-Earth asteroids and 279 were comets. The instruments used by the LINEAR program are located at Lincoln Laboratory's Experimental Test Site (ETS) on the White Sands Missile Range (WSMR) near Socorro, New Mexico.
Brian Geoffrey Marsden was a British astronomer and the longtime director of the Minor Planet Center (MPC) at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian.
Eleanor Francis "Glo" Helin was an American astronomer. She was principal investigator of the Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking (NEAT) program of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Lowell Observatory Near-Earth-Object Search (LONEOS) was a project designed to discover asteroids and comets that orbit near the Earth. The project, funded by NASA, was directed by astronomer Ted Bowell of Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. The LONEOS project began in 1993 and ran until the end of February 2008.
Schelte John "Bobby" Bus is an American astronomer and discoverer of minor planets at the Institute for Astronomy of the University of Hawaii and deputy director of NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) at the Mauna Kea Observatory in Hawaii, United States.
John Broughton is an Australian amateur astronomer and artist. He is among the most prolific discoverers of minor planets worldwide, credited by the Minor Planet Center with more than a thousand discoveries made between 1997 and 2008. His observations are done at Reedy Creek Observatory, in Queensland, Australia.
Roy A. Tucker (born 1951 in Jackson, Mississippi) is an American astronomer best known for the co-discovery of near-Earth asteroid 99942 Apophis (formerly known as 2004 MN4) along with David J. Tholen and Fabrizio Bernardi of the University of Hawaii. He is a prolific discoverer of minor planets, credited by the Minor Planet Center with the discovery of 702 numbered minor planets between 1996 and 2010. He has also discovered two comets: 328P/LONEOS–Tucker and C/2004 Q1, a Jupiter-family and near-parabolic comet, respectively.
Henry E. Holt was an American astronomer and prolific discoverer of minor planets and comets, who has worked as a planetary geologist at the United States Geological Survey and Northern Arizona University.
Gary Hug is an American amateur astronomer and a prolific discoverer of minor planets, who, along with Graham E. Bell, operates the Farpoint Observatory and Sandlot Observatory in Kansas, United States.
Timothy Bruce Spahr is an American astronomer and prolific discoverer of minor planets.
Piero Sicoli is an Italian astronomer and discoverer of minor planets, observing at the Italian Sormano Astronomical Observatory. As the observatory's coordinator, he is responsible for close encounters computation of near-Earth objects (NEOs), orbit computations, and identification of asteroids. The Observatory's focus is the examination and tracking of NEOs in Solar System.
Marc William Buie is an American astronomer and prolific discoverer of minor planets who works at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado in the Space Science Department. Formerly he worked at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, and was the Sentinel Space Telescope Mission Scientist for the B612 Foundation, which is dedicated to protecting Earth from asteroid impact events.
Farpoint Observatory is an astronomical observatory owned and operated by the Northeast Kansas Amateur Astronomers' League, or NEKAAL. It is located on the grounds of Mission Valley High School at Eskridge, near Auburn, Kansas, approximately 30 miles (48 km) southwest of Topeka, Kansas, United States.
The Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey (PCAS) was an astronomical survey, initiated by American astronomers Eleanor Helin and Eugene Shoemaker at the U.S Palomar Observatory, California, in 1973. The program is responsible for the discovery of 95 near-Earth Objects including 17 comets, while the Minor Planet Center directly credits PCAS with the discovery of 20 numbered minor planets during 1993–1994. PCAS ran for nearly 25 years until June 1995. It had an international extension, INAS, and was the immediate predecessor of the outstandingly successful NEAT program.
James Whitney Young is an American astronomer who worked in the field of asteroid research. After nearly 47 years with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at their Table Mountain Facility, Young retired July 16, 2009.
Michel Ory is a Swiss amateur astronomer and a prolific discoverer of minor planets and comets, who was one of five winners of the 2009 Edgar Wilson Award for his discovery of 304P/Ory, a periodic comet of the Jupiter family on 27 August 2008, using a 24-inch f/3.9 reflector at the Jura Observatory in Switzerland. In 2018, he was awarded a Gene Shoemaker NEO Grant which will improve the robotic survey he conducts in collaboration with Claudine Rinner at the Oukaïmeden Observatory in Morocco.
(285263) 1998 QE2, provisional designation 1998 QE2, is a dark asteroid and synchronous binary system, classified as near-Earth object and potentially hazardous asteroid of the Amor group, approximately 3 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 19 August 1998, by astronomers of the LINEAR program at Lincoln Laboratory's Experimental Test Site near Socorro, New Mexico, in the United States. Its sub-kilometer minor-planet moon was discovered by radar on 30 May 2013.
Erich Meyer is an Austrian engineer, amateur astronomer and discoverer of asteroids.
Robert D. Stephens is an American amateur astronomer and a prolific photometrist of minor planets at the Center for Solar System Studies, Rancho Cucamonga in California, United States.