Meanings of minor planet names: 82001–83000
This is a partial list of meanings of minor planet names. See meanings of minor planet names for a list of all such partial lists.
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 number-range 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published), a key source is Lutz D. Schmadel's Dictionary of Minor Planet Names, among others.[1][2][3] Meanings that do not quote a reference (the "†" links) are tentative. Meanings marked with an asterisk (*) are guesswork, and should be checked against the mentioned sources to ensure that the identification is correct.
- 82,001…
- 82,101…
- 82,201…
- 82,301…
- 82,401…
- 82,501…
- 82,601…
- 82,701…
- 82,801…
- 82,901…
- 77,000s
- 78,000s
- 79,000s
- 80,000s
- 81,000s
- 82,000s
- 83,000s
- 84,000s
- 85,000s
- 86,000s
- 87,000s
82001–82100
Number–Name | Prov. Designation | Source of Name |
82071 Debrecen | 2000 YA32 | 82071 Debrecen Discovered 2000 Dec. 31 by K. Sárneczky and L. Kiss at Piszkéstető. Debrecen is the second largest city in Hungary and the regional center and capital of Hajdú-Bihar county. Kossuth University is located there. The Heliophysical Observatory of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences evolved from the Kossuth educational observatory in 1958.JPL |
82092 Kalocsa | 2001 DV86 | Kalocsa, Hungary, birthplace of the second discoverer JPL |
82101–82200
82201–82300
82301–82400
82401–82500
Number–Name | Prov. Designation | Source of Name |
82463 Mluigiaborsi | 2001 OV16 | Maria Luigia Borsi, an Italian opera singer. JPL |
82464 Jaroslavboček | 2001 OE17 | Jaroslav Boček (b. 1947) has worked on the Astronomical Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences for several decades. He was involved in the European Network for photographing fireballs and his technical skills were crucial for running all-sky cameras on Czech stations of the network. JPL |
82501–82600
82601–82700
Number–Name | Prov. Designation | Source of Name |
82638 Bottariclaudio | 2001 PF1 | Since 1980, Claudio Bottari (born 1960) has been interested in the technical aspects of amateur astronomy and in 1991 was among the first to use CCDs in the Italian amateur community. At the Mira observatory he uses a 0.6-m concentric Schmidt-Cassegrain in search of SNe and NEOs. He discovered SN 1996ai in NGC 5005. JPL |
82656 Puskás | 2001 PQ13 | Ferenc Puskás, Hungarian football player JPL |
82701–82800
Number–Name | Prov. Designation | Source of Name |
There are no named minor planets in this number range |
82801–82900
82901–83000
References
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1–25,000 | |
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25,001–50,000 | |
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50,001–75,000 | |
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75,001–100,000 | |
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100,001–125,000 | |
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125,001–150,000 | |
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150,001–175,000 | |
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175,001–200,000 | |
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200,001–225,000 | |
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225,001–250,000 | |
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250,001–275,000 | |
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275,001–300,000 | |
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300,001–325,000 | |
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325,001–350,000 | |
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350,001–375,000 | |
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375,001–400,000 | |
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400,001–425,000 | |
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425,001–450,000 | |
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450,001–475,000 | |
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475,001–500,000 |
- 475k
- 476k
- 477k
- 478k
- 479k
- 480k
- 481k
- 482k
- 483k
- 484k
- 485k
- 486k
- 487k
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- 491k
- 492k
- 493k
- 494k
- 495k
- 496k
- 497k
- 498k
- 499k
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500,001–525,000 |
- 500k
- 501k
- 502k
- 503k
- 504k
- 505k
- 506k
- 507k
- 508k
- 509k
- 510k
- 511k
- 512k
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- 514k
- 515k
- 516k
- 517k
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