see § List of discovered minor planets |
Pamela M. Kilmartin is a New Zealand astronomer and a co-discoverer of minor planets and comets. [2]
She is credited by the Minor Planet Center with the discovery of 41 asteroids, all in collaboration with her husband, the astronomer Alan C. Gilmore. [1] Both astronomers are also active comet-hunters. She is a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand (RASNZ) and co-director of its "Comets and Minor Planets" section. [2] [3] Kilmartin is one of eleven voting members of the International Astronomical Union's working group on Small Bodies Nomenclature, which is responsible for naming asteroids. [4]
The minor planet 3907 Kilmartin, discovered by Max Wolf in 1904, was named in her honour. [2] Naming citation was published on 21 April 1989 ( M.P.C. 14482). [5] In 1983, the Eunomia asteroid 2537 Gilmore was already named after both, Alan and Pamela Gilmore. [6]
In May 2019 Kilmartin and her husband were honored by New Zealand Post with a stamp in its New Zealand Space Pioneers series. [7]
2434 Bateson [A] | 27 May 1981 |
3087 Beatrice Tinsley [A] | 30 August 1981 |
3152 Jones [A] | 7 June 1983 |
3305 Ceadams [A] | 21 May 1985 |
3400 Aotearoa [A] | 2 April 1981 |
3521 Comrie [A] | 26 June 1982 |
3563 Canterbury [A] | 23 March 1985 |
3810 Aoraki [A] | 20 February 1985 |
4154 Rumsey [A] | 10 July 1985 |
4243 Nankivell [A] | 4 April 1981 |
4248 Ranald [A] | 23 April 1984 |
4409 Kissling [A] | 30 June 1989 |
4819 Gifford [A] | 24 May 1985 |
4837 Bickerton [A] | 30 June 1989 |
5207 Hearnshaw [A] | 15 April 1988 |
5251 Bradwood [A] | 18 May 1985 |
5311 Rutherford [A] | 3 April 1981 |
5718 Roykerr [A] | 4 August 1983 |
(5763) 1982 MA [A] | 23 June 1982 |
(5818) 1989 RC1 [A] | 5 September 1989 |
(5898) 1985 KE [A] | 23 May 1985 |
(5906) 1989 SN5 [A] | 24 September 1989 |
(6034) 1987 JA [A] | 5 May 1987 |
(6142) 1993 FP [A] | 23 March 1993 |
(7432) 1993 HL5 [A] | 23 April 1993 |
(8481) 1988 LH [A] | 14 June 1988 |
(8884) 1994 CM2 [A] | 12 February 1994 |
(9018) 1987 JG [A] | 5 May 1987 |
(9750) 1989 NE1 [A] | 8 July 1989 |
(11080) 1993 FO [A] | 23 March 1993 |
(13510) 1989 OL [A] | 29 July 1989 |
(13511) 1989 RD1 [A] | 5 September 1989 |
(13552) 1992 GA [A] | 4 April 1992 |
(15712) 1989 RN2 [A] | 1 September 1989 |
(18340) 1989 OM [A] | 29 July 1989 |
(21130) 1993 FN [A] | 23 March 1993 |
(30945) 1994 GW9 [A] | 14 April 1994 |
(48501) 1993 FM [A] | 23 March 1993 |
(58158) 1989 RA [A] | 1 September 1989 |
(65718) 1993 FL [A] | 23 March 1993 |
(422979) 2003 PX10 [A] | 4 August 2003 |
A co-discovered with Alan C. Gilmore |
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Johann Palisa was an Austrian astronomer, born in Troppau, Austrian Silesia, now Czech Republic. He was a prolific discoverer of asteroids, discovering 122 in all, from 136 Austria in 1874 to 1073 Gellivara in 1923. Some of his notable discoveries include 153 Hilda, 216 Kleopatra, 243 Ida, 253 Mathilde, 324 Bamberga, and the near-Earth asteroid 719 Albert. Palisa made his discoveries without the aid of photography, and he remains the most successful visual (non-photographic) asteroid discoverer of all time. He was awarded the Valz Prize from the French Academy of Sciences in 1906. The asteroid 914 Palisana, discovered by Max Wolf in 1919, and the lunar crater Palisa were named in his honour.
Maximilian Franz Joseph Cornelius Wolf was a German astronomer and a pioneer in the field of astrophotography. He was the chairman of astronomy at the University of Heidelberg and director of the Heidelberg-Königstuhl State Observatory from 1902 until his death in 1932.
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Antonio Vagnozzi is an amateur Italian astronomer and a discoverer of asteroids.
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