Recent Articles



































List of asteroids



         



This is a list of numbered asteroids, in sequential order. As of June 2004 there were over 80,000 numbered asteroids (and many more not yet numbered).

Many asteroids are fairly ordinary and not particularly noteworthy. For a smaller list of "interesting" asteroids, see List of noteworthy asteroids.

[Top]

List of asteroids

The list is too long to fit on one page, see these subpages:

1–1000 10001–11000 20001–21000 30001–31000 40001–41000
1001–2000 11001–12000 21001–22000 31001–32000 41001–42000
2001–3000 12001–13000 22001–23000 32001–33000 42001–43000
3001–4000 13001–14000 23001–24000 33001–34000 43001–44000
4001–5000 14001–15000 24001–25000 34001–35000 44001–45000
5001–6000 15001–16000 25001–26000 35001–36000 45001–46000
6001–7000 16001–17000 26001–27000 36001–37000 46001–47000
7001–8000 17001–18000 27001–28000 37001–38000 47001–48000
8001–9000 18001–19000 28001–29000 38001–39000 48001–49000
9001–10000 19001–20000 29001–30000 39001–40000 49001–50000


50001–51000 60001–61000 70001–71000 80001–81000
51001–52000 61001–62000 71001–72000 81001–82000
52001–53000 62001–63000 72001–73000 82001–83000
53001–54000 63001–64000 73001–74000 83001–84000
54001–55000 64001–65000 74001–75000 84001–85000
55001–56000 65001–66000 75001–76000 85001–86000
56001–57000 66001–67000 76001–77000 86001–87000
57001–58000 67001–68000 77001–78000 87001–88000
58001–59000 68001–69000 78001–79000 88001–89000
59001–60000 69001–70000 79001–80000 89001–90000




[Top]

Numbering and naming conventions

After discovery, asteroids generally receive a systematic name (such as "1989 AC"), then a number (such as 4179), and finally (optionally) a name (such as "Toutatis"), in that order.

In modern times, an asteroid receives a sequential number only after its orbit is precisely known. Asteroids whose orbits are not (yet) precisely known are known by their systematic name (see provisional designation). This rule was not necessarily followed in earlier times, and some asteroids received a number but were subsequently "lost". All of these have now been recovered; the last "lost" numbered asteroid was 719 Albert (although 1915 Quetzálcoatl and (3360) 1981 VA have not been seen since 1985 (see ), their orbits are known and close Earth approaches are due in 2062 and 69230 Hermes was originally discovered in 1937, but was lost until 2003. Only after it was recovered could its orbit be established and a number assigned. Before this, it was simply known as 1937 UB (its systematic name).

Only after a number is assigned is the asteroid is eligible to receive a name (for many years, Hermes was a rare exception, an unnumbered asteroid with a name). Usually the discoverer has up to 10 years to pick a name; some asteroids remain unnamed. Especially towards the end of the 20th century, with large-scale automated asteroid discovery programs such as LINEAR, the pace of discoveries has increased so much that it seems likely that the vast majority of "run of the mill" discoveries from now on will never receive names.

In rare cases, a very unusual object may receive an unofficial name before it is numbered. A recent example is Sedna, which officially only has the systematic name "2003 VB12" for the time being. After it is numbered, Sedna will be proposed as the official name and it is highly likely that it will be accepted.

[Top]

Related topics

[Top]




  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License