Meanings of minor planet names: 46001–47000

Meanings of minor planet names: 46001–47000

As minor planet discoveries are confirmed, they are given a permanent number by the IAU's Minor Planet Center, and the discoverers can then submit names for them, following the IAU's naming conventions. The list below concerns those minor planets in the specified span of numbers that have received names, and explains the meanings of those names. Besides the Minor Planet Circulars (in which the citations are published), a key source is Lutz D. Schmadel's Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Meanings that do not quote a reference (the "†" links) are tentative.

Minor planets not yet given a name have not been included in this list.

Contents: 46,001… 46,101… 46,201… 46,301… 46,401… 46,501… 46,601… 46,701… 46,801… 46,901…

Name Provisional Designation Source of Name
46001–46100
46053 Davidpatterson 2001 DB77 David Patterson, American amateur astronomer, founding member of the Huachuca Astronomy Club
46095 Frédérickoby 2001 ER25 Frédéric-Édouard Koby, Swiss ophthalmologist and paleontologist, specialist on the cave bear
46201–46300
46280 Hollar 2001 KD18 Václav Hollar, 17th-century Czech painter and graphic artist
46301–46400
46392 Bertola 2002 AO6 Francesco Bertola, Italian author, professor of astrophysics and director of the astronomy department at Padua University
46401–46500
46441 Mikepenston 2002 LE30 Michael Penston, British astronomer
46442 Keithtritton 2002 LK35 Keith P. Tritton, British astronomer; the discoverers recently found his lost short-period comet D/1978 C1, now known as 157P/Tritton
46501–46600
46514 Lasswitz 1977 JA Kurd Lasswitz, German philosopher and poet
46563 Oken 1991 RY3 Lorenz Oken, German professor of medicine and Romantic natural philosopher, founder of the Gesellschaft Deutscher Naturforscher und Ärzte (Society of German Naturalists and Physicians)
46568 Stevenlee 1991 SL Steven Lee, Australian astronomer, discoverer of comet C/1999 H1 (Lee)
46601–46700
46610 Bésixdouze 1993 TQ1 The number 46610 translates to the hexadecimal B612 (the French "bé-six-douze" stands for "b-six-twelve"), the designation of the fictitious minor planet on which Saint-Exupéry's Little Prince lived
46643 Yanase 1995 KM Takashi Yanase, Japanese cartoonist
46644 Lagia 1995 OF Livia "Lagia" Giacomini, Italian scientific journalist and astrophysicist
46692 Taormina 1997 CW1 Taormina, Sicily
46701–46800
46702 Linapucci 1997 DX Lina Pucci, mother of the first discoverer
46719 Plantade 1997 PJ François de Plantade, French cartographer and astronomer, founder of the Société royale des sciences de Montpellier (Royal Society of Sciences of Montpellier)
46720 Pierostroppa 1997 PO4 Piero Stroppa, Italian physics teacher and astronomy populariser, who worked for the magazine Nuovo Orione
46731 Prieurblanc 1997 TB18 Pierre Prieur-Blanc, one of the three people involved in the construction of the Observatoire de Paris' coronagraphic station on Pic de Château-Renard at Saint-Véran in the Hautes-Alpes
46737 Anpanman 1997 VO Anpanman, Takashi Yanase's cartoon hero, whose head is a bun filled with sweet bean jam
46793 Phinney 1998 JP Jeffrey L. Phinney, American astronomer
46901–47000
46977 Krakow 1998 SE144 Krakow, Poland
Preceded by
45,001–46,000
Meanings of minor planet names
List of minor planets: 46,001–47,000
Succeeded by
47,001–48,000

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  • List of minor planets — Objects in the Solar System By orbit By size By discovery date …   Wikipedia

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