Meanings of asteroid names (26001-27000)
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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 Meanings that do not quote a reference (the "†" links) are tentative.
Asteroids not yet given a name have not been included in this list.
Contents: 26001... 26101... 26201... 26301... 26401... 26501... 26601... 26701... 26801... 26901...
Name | Provisional Designation | Source of Name |
---|---|---|
26001-26100 | ||
26057 Ankaios | 4742 T-2 | Ancaeus, in Greek mythology, one of the Argonauts, father of Agapenor † |
26074 Carlwirtz | 1977 TD | Carl Wilhelm Wirtz, 19th-20th-century German astronomer, the first, in 1924, to prove the existence of a redshift-distance relationship for spiral nebulae † |
26101-26200 | ||
26119 Duden | 1991 TN7 | Konrad Duden, 19th-20th-century German philologist, author of the "Duden", Orthographisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache, key German dictionary † |
26168 Kanaikiyotaka | 1995 WT8 | Kiyotaka Kanai, Japanese amateur astronomer, key member of Ota Uchuno Kai, independent discoverer of comet C/1970 B1 and co-discoverer of 7752 Otauchunokai † |
26169 Ishikawakiyoshi | 1995 YY | Akiyoshi Ishikawa, Japanese amateur astronomer, a key member of Ota Uchuno Kai † |
26170 Kazuhiko | 1996 BH2 | Kazuhiko Ichikawa, Japanese amateur astronomer, one of the founders of the Yamaneko Group of Comet Observers and a key member of Ota Uchuno Kai † |
26177 Fabiodolfi | 1996 GN2 | Fabio Dolfi, Italian amateur astronomer † |
26195 Černohlávek | 1997 EN | Ivo Černohlávek, 20th-century Czech pioneer of the Internet † |
26197 Bormio | 1997 FN1 | Bormio, Italy † ‡ |
26201-26300 | ||
26205 Kuratowski | 1997 LA5 | Kazimierz Kuratowski, 20th-century Polish mathematician † |
26210 Lingas | 1997 RC3 | Lingas plateau, in the Parc national des Cévennes (Cévennes National Park), site of the Observatoire des Pises † |
26214 Kalinga | 1997 US10 | UNESCO's Kalinga Prize (bearing the old name of the Indian state of Orissa) † |
26276 Natrees | 1998 SL4 | Nathaniel Paul Rees, grandson of the discoverer † |
26277 Ianrees | 1998 SM4 | Ian Hudson Rees, grandson of the discoverer † |
26301-26400 | ||
26314 Škvorecký | 1998 UJ1 | Josef Škvorecký, Czech writer † ‡ + |
26328 Litomyšl | 1998 WQ | Litomyšl, Czech Republic † ‡ |
26340 Evamarková | 1998 XY8 | Eva Marková, Czech astronomer † ‡ |
26355 Grueber | 1998 YL8 | Johannes Grueber, 17th-century Austrian Jesuit priest, missionary, mathematician, astronomer at the Chinese imperial court, and author of the first European travelogue of Tibet † |
26356 Aventini | 1998 YE10 | Andrea Aventini, Italian amateur astronomer † |
26357 Laguerre | 1998 YK10 | Edmond Nicolas Laguerre, 19th-century French mathematician † |
26376 Roborosa | 1999 EB3 | Róbert "Robo" Rosa, 20th-century Slovak amateur astronomer and computer graphic designer † |
26390 Rušin | 1999 UX2 | Vojtech Rušin, Slovak solar physicist † |
26401-26500 | ||
26401 Sobotište | 1999 WX | Sobotište, a village in southwestern Slovakia, home of an astronomical observatory † |
26498 Dinotina | 2000 CV1 | Dino and Tina Grifoni, uncle and aunt of Andrea Boattini † |
26500 Toshiohino | 2000 CC2 | Toshio Hino, Japanese astronomer † |
26501-26600 | ||
26501 Sachiko | 2000 CP2 | Sachiko Nagata, teacher of Oshibana, the Japanese art of arranging pressed flowers † |
26601-26700 | ||
26629 Zahller | 2000 GZ132 | Cordelia Zahller Luginbuhl (the discoverer's mother), and the Zahller family † |
26639 Murgaš | 2000 JB7 | Jozef Murgaš, 19th-20th-century Slovak inventor, architect, botanist, painter, patriot, and Roman Catholic priest † |
26640 Bahýľ | 2000 JV10 | Ján Bahýľ, 19th-20th-century Slovak inventor and aeronautical pioneer † |
26661 Kempelen | 2000 WY67 | Wolfgang von Kempelen, 18th-century Austrian polymath, mechanic and inventor † |
26701-26800 | ||
26715 South Dakota | 2001 HJ | South Dakota, where the discovery site, the Badlands Observatory, is situated † |
26733 Nanavisitor | 2001 HC16 | Nana Visitor (Nana Tucker), American actress † |
26734 Terryfarrell | 2001 HG16 | Terry Farrell (Theresa Lee Farrell), American actress † |
26757 Bastei | 2001 KU17 | The Bastei, a 193 m rock in the middle of the Elbsandsteingebirge (eastern Germany's "Saxon Switzerland"), rising above the Elbe river † |
26761 Stromboli | 2033 P-L | Stromboli island and volcano † |
26763 Peirithoos | 2706 P-L | Peirithoos, mythological friend of Theseus and father of the Greek hero Polypoites † |
26801-26900 | ||
26821 Baehr | 1988 FM1 | George Baehr, 17th-18th-century German Baroque architect † |
26829 Sakaihoikuen | 1989 WN2 | Kindergarten Sakaihoikuen, Musashino City, Tokyo, Japan † |
26842 Hefele | 1991 TK6 | Herbert Hefele, German astronomer, editor of the Astronomy and Astrophysics Abstracts, and librarian of the Astronomisches Rechen-Institut (ARI) † |
26851 Sarapul | 1992 OV5 | Sarapul, Russia, on the Kama river † |
26858 Misterrogers | 1993 FR | Mister Rogers (Fred McFeely Rogers) television character † |
26879 Haines | 1994 NL2 | Peter Wyatt Haines, Australian geologist, discoverer of several impact craters in Australia † |
26887 Tokyogiants | 1994 TO15 | Tokyo Yomiuri Giants baseball team † |
26891 Johnbutler | 1995 CC2 | Christopher John Butler, Irish astronomer, discoverer of an exceptional flare on HD 6090 ("Butler's star") † |
26896 Josefhudec | 1995 OY | Josef Hudec, 20th-century Czech amateur astronomer and astronomy popularizer, builder of the Kroměříž public observatory † |
26901-27000 | ||
26908 Lebesgue | 1996 GK | Henri-Léon Lebesgue, 19th-20th-century French mathematician † |
26909 Lefschetz | 1996 HY1 | Solomon Lefschetz, American mathematician † |
26917 Pianoro | 1996 RF4 | Pianoro, Italy, location of Pianoro Observatory (Osservatorio Astronomico di Pianoro) † |
26921 Jensallit | 1996 TF15 | Jennifer Sallit, wife of the discoverer † |
26922 Samara | 1996 TD40 | The Samara river, flowing from the foothills of the Urals to join the Volga at the city of Samara † |
26924 Johnharvey | 1996 YZ2 | John Warren Harvey, American heliologist † |
26935 Vireday | 1997 EE46 | Carol Claire Vireday, wife of the discoverer † |
26937 Makimiyamoto | 1997 FQ1 | Maki Miyamoto, Japanese actress † |
26950 Legendre | 1997 JH10 | Adrien-Marie Legendre, 18th-19th-century French mathematician † |
26954 Skadiang | 1997 MG | Karen Skadiang, Australian amateur astronomer and friend of the discoverer † |
26955 Lie | 1997 MR1 | Marius Sophus Lie, 19th-century Norwegian mathematician † |
26960 Liouville | 1997 NE3 | Joseph Liouville, 19th-century French mathematician † |
26963 Palorapavý | 1997 PM4 | Pavol "Palo" Rapavý, Slovak astronomer, director of the public observatory in Rimavská Sobota † |
26969 Biver | 1997 SE | Nicolas Biver, French astronomer † ‡ |
26970 Eliáš | 1997 SE2 | Mojmír Eliáš, Czech geologist and planetologist † |
26971 Sezimovo Ústí | 1997 SL2 | Sezimovo Ústí, a town in southern Bohemia, the Czech Republic † |
26973 Lála | 1997 SP25 | Petr Lála, Czech astronomer † |
26984 Fernand-Roland | 1997 VV | Fernand-Roland Merlin, friend of the discoverers † |
26986 Čáslavská | 1997 VC5 | Vera Čáslavská, Czech gymnast and olympic gold medalist, world's best sportswoman of 1968 † |
26993 Littlewood | 1997 XC1 | John Edensor Littlewood, British mathematician † |
Preceded by 25001–26000 |
Meanings of minor planet names List of asteroids (26001-27000) |
Succeeded by 27001–28000 |