A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9
As minor planet discoveries are confirmed, they are given a permanent number by the IAU's Minor Planet Center (MPC), 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.
Official naming citations of newly named small Solar System bodies are approved and published in a bulletin by IAU's Working Group for Small Bodies Nomenclature (WGSBN).[1] Before May 2021, citations were published in MPC's Minor Planet Circulars for many decades.[2] Recent citations can also be found on the JPL Small-Body Database (SBDB).[3] Until his death in 2016, German astronomer Lutz D. Schmadel compiled these citations into the Dictionary of Minor Planet Names (DMP) and regularly updated the collection.[4][5]
Based on Paul Herget's The Names of the Minor Planets,[6] Schmadel also researched the unclear origin of numerous asteroids, most of which had been named prior to World War II. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: SBDB New namings may only be added to this list below after official publication as the preannouncement of names is condemned.[7] The WGSBN publishes a comprehensive guideline for the naming rules of non-cometary small Solar System bodies.[8]
3001–3100
Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
---|---|---|---|
3001 Michelangelo | 1982 BC1 | Michelangelo (1475–1564), Italian sculptor, painter, architect, and poet of the High Renaissance | MPC · 3001 |
3002 Delasalle | 1982 FB3 | Jean-Baptiste de La Salle (1651–1719), French priest, educational reformer, and founder of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools | MPC · 3002 |
3003 Konček | 1983 YH | Mikuláš Konček (1900–1982), Slovak meteorologist who founded of the Meteorological Institute in Bratislava | MPC · 3003 |
3004 Knud | 1976 DD | Knud Rasmussen (1879–1933), Greenlandic/Danish polar explorer and anthropologist, who has been called the "father of Eskimology" | MPC · 3004 |
3005 Pervictoralex | 1979 QK2 | Per Victor Alexander Lagerkvist, son of Swedish discoverer Claes-Ingvar Lagerkvist | MPC · 3005 |
3006 Livadia | 1979 SF11 | Livadiya, a suburb of Yalta on the coast of the Crimean Peninsula | MPC · 3006 |
3007 Reaves | 1979 UC | Gibson Reaves, American astronomer, historian and educator at the University of Southern California | MPC · 3007 |
3008 Nojiri | 1938 WA | Hōei Nojiri (1885–1977) Japanese essayist, author and astronomer | MPC · 3008 |
3009 Coventry | 1973 SM2 | Coventry, England, sister city of Volgograd | MPC · 3009 |
3010 Ushakov | 1978 SB5 | Fyodor Ushakov (1745–1817), Russian admiral | MPC · 3010 |
3011 Chongqing | 1978 WM14 | Chongqing, China | MPC · 3011 |
3012 Minsk | 1979 QU9 | Minsk, Byelorussian SSR | MPC · 3012 |
3013 Dobrovoleva | 1979 SD7 | Oleg Vasilyevich Dobrovolsky, Soviet astronomer known for his cometary studies. He was the head of the Cometary Astronomy Department of the Institute of Astrophysics of the Tadjik S.S.R. Academy of Sciences in Dushanbe. | MPC · 3013 |
3014 Huangsushu | 1979 TM | Su-Shu Huang (1915–1977), Chinese-American astrophysicist known for his studies on circumstellar habitable zones and prerequisites of extraterrestrial life | MPC · 3014 |
3015 Candy | 1980 VN | Michael P. Candy (1928–1994), British astrometrist and discoverer of minor planets and comets. Director of the Royal Greenwich Observatory and Perth Observatory. President of IAU Commission VI. | MPC · 3015 |
3016 Meuse | 1981 EK | The Meuse River (Dutch Maas), which rises in France and flows through Belgium and the Netherlands | MPC · 3016 |
3017 Petrovič | 1981 UL | Štefan Petrovič (1906–?), Slovak climatologist | MPC · 3017 |
3018 Godiva | 1982 KM | Lady Godiva (died ca. 1076), medieval Anglo-Saxon noblewoman and church patron, wife of Leofric, Earl of Mercia | MPC · 3018 |
3019 Kulin | 1940 AC | György Kulin (1905–1989), Hungarian astronomer | MPC · 3019 |
3020 Naudts | 1949 PR | Ignace Naudts (1949–1992), Belgian amateur astronomer | MPC · 3020 |
3021 Lucubratio | 1967 CB | Latin for "nocturnal study, night work" (from lucubrum, candle) | MPC · 3021 |
3022 Dobermann | 1980 SH | Karl Friedrich Louis Dobermann (1834–1894), German zoologist and amateur astronomer known for breeding the Dobermann | MPC · 3022 |
3023 Heard | 1981 JS | John Frederick Heard (1907–1976), Canadian astronomer, professor of astronomy at the University of Toronto and fourth director of the David Dunlap Observatory | MPC · 3023 |
3024 Hainan | 1981 UW9 | Hainan Province | MPC · 3024 |
3025 Higson | 1982 QR | Roger Higson, American night assistant for the 1.2-meter Samuel Oschin telescope at Palomar Observatory in California. His supportive work has been appreciated by observers of comets and minor planets. | MPC · 3025 |
3026 Sarastro | 1977 TA1 | Sarastro, high priest of the Temple of Wisdom in Mozart's The Magic Flute | MPC · 3026 |
3027 Shavarsh | 1978 PQ2 | Shavarsh Karapetyan (born 1953), Soviet–Armenian champion and world-record finswimmer, who saved 20 lives from drowning when a trolleybus fell into the Yerevan Lake. | MPC · 3027 |
3028 Zhangguoxi | 1978 TA2 | Zhang Guoxi, Chinese industrialist and philanthropist | MPC · 3028 |
3029 Sanders | 1981 EA8 | Jeffrey D. Sanders, American astronomer who participated in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey as an undergraduate student | MPC · 3029 |
3030 Vehrenberg | 1981 EH16 | Hans Vehrenberg, German amateur astronomer from Düsseldorf. He is the author of the Atlas of Deep-Sky Splendors (German: Mein Messier-Buch). For researchers on minor planets and comets, he published the "Falkauer Atlas" and "Atlas Stellarum". | MPC · 3030 |
3031 Houston | 1984 CX | Walter Scott Houston (1912–1993), American amateur astronomer well known for his column Deep Sky Wonders in Sky & Telescope | MPC · 3031 |
3032 Evans | 1984 CA1 | Reverend Robert O. Evans, Australian amateur astronomer, discoverer of several extragalactic supernovae | MPC · 3032 |
3033 Holbaek | 1984 EJ | Holbæk, Denmark, town nearest to the discovery site (Brorfelde Observatoriet) on the occasion of the former's 700th anniversary in 1986 | MPC · 3033 |
3034 Climenhaga | A917 SE | John L. Climenhaga (1916–2008), Canadian astronomer and father of journalist David Climenhaga (Src/Src) | MPC · 3034 |
3035 Chambers | A924 EJ | John Eric Chambers (born 1969), then British predoctoral fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics | MPC · 3035 |
3036 Krat | 1937 TO | Vladimir Krat (1911–1983), Russian astronomer | MPC · 3036 |
3037 Alku | 1944 BA | Finnish for "Beginning", the discoverer's boyhood boat, built by his father | MPC · 3037 |
3038 Bernes | 1978 QB3 | Mark Bernes (1911–1969), Soviet film actor and singer | MPC · 3038 |
3039 Yangel | 1978 SP2 | Mikhail Yangel (1911–1971), leading Soviet rocket and missile designer | MPC · 3039 |
3040 Kozai | 1979 BA | Yoshihide Kozai (1928–2018), Japanese astronomer and celestial mechanician, discoverer of the Kozai mechanism | MPC · 3040 |
3041 Webb | 1980 GD | Rev. Thomas William Webb (1807–1885), British astronomer, author of Celestial Objects for Common Telescopes and discoverer of S Orionis | MPC · 3041 |
3042 Zelinsky | 1981 EF10 | David S. Zelinsky, American mathematician at Brown University, formerly active participant in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey while an undergraduate student at Caltech | MPC · 3042 |
3043 San Diego | 1982 SA | San Diego, California, in recognition of its efforts to curb light pollution | MPC · 3043 |
3044 Saltykov | 1983 RE3 | Nikita Saltykov (1893–1946), Russian farmer and grandfather of Natal'ja Vital'evna Metlova who co-discovered this minor planet | MPC · 3044 |
3045 Alois | 1984 AW | Alois T. Stuczynski, grandfather of American astronomer Joe Wagner who discovered this minor planet | MPC · 3045 |
3046 Molière | 4120 P-L | Molière (1622–1673), French playwright | MPC · 3046 |
3047 Goethe | 6091 P-L | Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832), German poet and playwright | MPC · 3047 |
3048 Guangzhou | 1964 TH1 | Guangzhou, Guangdong, China | MPC · 3048 |
3049 Kuzbass | 1968 FH | The coal mining Kuznets Basin, located in the Kemerovo Region of Siberia, one of the richest coal deposits in the world | MPC · 3049 |
3050 Carrera | 1972 NW | The four brothers of the Carrera family: Javiera (1781–1862), Juan José (1782–1818), José Miguel (1785–1821), and Luis (1791–1818), key figures of the Chilean War of Independence | MPC · 3050 |
3051 Nantong | 1974 YP | Nantong, Jiangsu, China | MPC · 3051 |
3052 Herzen | 1976 YJ3 | Alexander Herzen (1812–1870), Russian revolutionary, writer, and philosopher, "father of Russian socialism" and founder of the free Russian press abroad | MPC · 3052 |
3053 Dresden | 1977 QS | The German city of Dresden | MPC · 3053 |
3054 Strugatskia | 1977 RE7 | The brothers Arkady and Boris Strugatsky (1925–1991, 1933–2012) Russian science fiction writers | MPC · 3054 |
3055 Annapavlova | 1978 TR3 | Anna Pavlova (1881–1931), Russian prima ballerina best known for her performance of The Dying Swan | MPC · 3055 |
3056 INAG | 1978 VD1 | The French National Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics (French: Institut national d'astronomie et de géophysique; INAG), which built the discovery telescope | MPC · 3056 |
3057 Mälaren | 1981 EG | Lake Mälaren, Sweden | MPC · 3057 |
3058 Delmary | 1981 EO17 | Delmary Rose Schanz (born 1938), American artist | MPC · 3058 |
3059 Pryor | 1981 EF23 | Carlton P. Pryor, American astronomer who participated in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey while an undergraduate student at Caltech | MPC · 3059 |
3060 Delcano | 1982 RD1 | Juan Sebastián Elcano or del Caño (1476–1526), Spanish navigator, lieutenant of Magellan, first to continuously circumnavigate the globe | MPC · 3060 |
3061 Cook | 1982 UB1 | James Cook (1728–1779), British explorer and navigator | MPC · 3061 |
3062 Wren | 1982 XC | Sir Christopher Wren (1632–1723), British architect and astronomer | MPC · 3062 |
3063 Makhaon | 1983 PV | Makhaon, mythical physician to Greeks during the Trojan War | MPC · 3063 |
3064 Zimmer | 1984 BB1 | Louis Zimmer (1888–1970), Belgian amateur astronomer and clockmaker to the King of Belgium | MPC · 3064 |
3065 Sarahill | 1984 CV | Sarah J. Hill, professor of astronomy and chairman of the astronomy department at Wellesley College | MPC · 3065 |
3066 McFadden | 1984 EO | Lucy-Ann McFadden (born 1953), American astronomer and planetary scientist | MPC · 3066 |
3067 Akhmatova | 1982 TE2 | Anna Akhmatova (1889–1966), Soviet poet | MPC · 3067 |
3068 Khanina | 1982 YJ1 | Frida Borisovna Khanina, Soviet orbit computer and long-time member of the Institute for Theoretical Astronomy | MPC · 3068 |
3069 Heyrovský | 1982 UG2 | Jaroslav Heyrovský (1890–1967), Czech physical chemist | MPC · 3069 |
3070 Aitken | 1949 GK | Robert Grant Aitken (1864–1951), American astronomer, fourth director of the Lick Observatory, and author of the "New General Catalogue of Double Stars within 12° of the North Pole" (1932) | MPC · 3070 |
3071 Nesterov | 1973 FT1 | Pyotr Nesterov (1887–1914), Russian pioneer airman | MPC · 3071 |
3072 Vilnius | 1978 RS1 | Vilnius, Lithuania | MPC · 3072 |
3073 Kursk | 1979 SW11 | Kursk, Russia | MPC · 3073 |
3074 Popov | 1979 YE9 | Alexander Stepanovich Popov (1859–1906), Russian radio inventor | MPC · 3074 |
3075 Bornmann | 1981 EY15 | Patricia L. Bornmann, American solar astronomer who participated in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey while an undergraduate student at Caltech | MPC · 3075 |
3076 Garber | 1982 RB1 | Paul E. Garber (1899–1992), American historian and first head of the National Air Museum of the Smithsonian Institution, in Washington, D.C | MPC · 3076 |
3077 Henderson | 1982 SK | Thomas Henderson (1798–1844), Scottish astronomer, mathematician, and first Astronomer Royal for Scotland. In 1839 he was the first person to measure the distance Alpha Centauri | MPC · 3077 |
3078 Horrocks | 1984 FG | Jeremiah Horrocks (1619–1641), also known as Jeremiah Horrox, English astronomer and mathematician who predicted and was the first to observe the transit of Venus in 1639. He also demonstrated that the Moon moved around the Earth in an elliptical orbit. | MPC · 3078 |
3079 Schiller | 2578 P-L | Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805), German playwright | MPC · 3079 |
3080 Moisseiev | 1935 TE | Nikolay Moiseyev (1902–1955), Soviet astronomer and an expert in celestial mechanics | MPC · 3080 |
3081 Martinůboh | 1971 UP | Bohuslav Martinů (1890–1959), Czech composer of modern classical music | MPC · 3081 |
3082 Dzhalil | 1972 KE | Musa Cälil (Musa Mustafovich Dzhalil'; 1906–1944), Tatar Soviet poet and resistance fighter | MPC · 3082 |
3083 OAFA | 1974 MH | Félix Aguilar Observatory in Argentina | MPC · 3083 |
3084 Kondratyuk | 1977 QB1 | Yuri Kondratyuk (1897–1942), Soviet engineer, mathematician and pioneer of astronautics and spaceflight | MPC · 3084 |
3085 Donna | 1980 DA | Donna Marie Thompson, American administrative assistant for the Minor Planet Center and the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams, secretary for the Planetary Sciences division of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics | MPC · 3085 |
3086 Kalbaugh | 1980 XE | Carroll Kalbaugh Liller, father of Chilean astronomer William Liller | MPC · 3086 |
3087 Beatrice Tinsley | 1981 QJ1 | Beatrice Tinsley (1941–1981), British-born New Zealand astronomer and cosmologist | MPC · 3087 |
3088 Jinxiuzhonghua | 1981 UX9 | "Splendid China", park at Shenzhen, the largest miniature scenic spot in the world | MPC · 3088 |
3089 Oujianquan | 1981 XK2 | Ou Jianquan, Chinese entrepreneur, for his notable contributions developing township enterprises | MPC · 3089 |
3090 Tjossem | 1982 AN | The Tjossem family of central Washington State, four generations of whose members have been friends of the discoverer and his family (in particular Peter Tjossem, 19th–20th-century amateur entomologist and paleobotanist) | MPC · 3090 |
3091 van den Heuvel | 6081 P-L | Ed van den Heuvel (born 1940), Dutch astronomer, and his niece Julia Edith van den Heuvel | MPC · 3091 |
3092 Herodotus | 6550 P-L | Herodotus (c. 484 BC – c. 425 BC), Greek historian, "Father of Historiography" | MPC · 3092 |
3093 Bergholz | 1971 MG | Olga Bergholz (1910–1975), Soviet poet | MPC · 3093 |
3094 Chukokkala | 1979 FE2 | Korney Chukovsky (1882–1969), pen name of Nikolaj Kornejchukov, one of the most popular children's poets in the Russian language | MPC · 3094 |
3095 Omarkhayyam | 1980 RT2 | Omar Khayyam (1048–1131), Persian astronomer, mathematician and philosopher | MPC · 3095 |
3096 Bezruč | 1981 QC1 | Petr Bezruč (1867–1958), Czech poet | MPC · 3096 |
3097 Tacitus | 2011 P-L | Tacitus (c. 56–120), Roman historian | MPC · 3097 |
3098 van Sprang | 4579 P-L | Bert van Sprang (1944–2015), Dutch meteor specialist | MPC · 3098 |
3099 Hergenrother | 1940 GF | Carl W. Hergenrother (born 1973), American astronomer and discoverer of minor planets | MPC · 3099 |
3100 Zimmerman | 1977 EQ1 | Nikolaj Vladimirovich Zimmerman (1890–1942), Russian astronomer at Pulkovo Observatory and professor at Leningrad University, known for his astrometric observations and his compilations of star catalogs | MPC · 3100 |
3101–3200
Named minor planet | Provisional | This minor planet was named for... | Ref · Catalog |
---|---|---|---|
3101 Goldberger | 1978 GB | Marvin Leonard Goldberger (1922–2014), American physicist, teacher and humanitarian, president of the California Institute of Technology, to commemorate his birthday, October 22 | MPC · 3101 |
3102 Krok | 1981 QA | Krok (Libuše), mythical Slavonic prince | MPC · 3102 |
3103 Eger | 1982 BB | Eger a small town NE of Budapest, at one time the sixth largest town in Hungary, known for its medieval streets, castle, and red wine (Bull's Blood) | MPC · 3103 |
3104 Dürer | 1982 BB1 | Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528), German master painter, woodcutter, engraver, and scholar | MPC · 3104 |
3105 Stumpff | A907 PB | Karl Stumpff (1895–1970), German celestial mechanician and professor of astronomy, pioneer of Fast Fourier Analysis, author of the three-volume Himmelsmechanik | MPC · 3105 |
3106 Morabito | 1981 EE | Linda A. Morabito (born 1953), Education Programs Manager at the Planetary Society | MPC · 3106 |
3107 Weaver | 1981 JG2 | Kenneth Weaver (1915–2010), American senior assistant editor for science of the National Geographic magazine | MPC · 3107 |
3108 Lyubov | 1972 QM | Lyubov Orlova (1902–1975), actress and star of Soviet cinema | MPC · 3108 |
3109 Machin | 1974 DC | Arnold Machin (1911–1999), British sculptor | MPC · 3109 |
3110 Wagman | 1975 SC | Nicholas E. Wagman (1905–1980), American astronomer and astrometrist | MPC · 3110 |
3111 Misuzu | 1977 DX8 | Nickname of Shinano Province, now Nagano Prefecture, Japan, the discovery site | MPC · 3111 |
3112 Velimir | 1977 QC5 | Velimir (Viktor Vladimirovitch) Khlebnikov, 19th–20th-century Russian poet | MPC · 3112 |
3113 Chizhevskij | 1978 RO | Aleksandr Leonidovich Chizhevskij, 20th-century Soviet biologist, one of the founders of heliobiology | MPC · 3113 |
3114 Ercilla | 1980 FB12 | Don Alonso de Ercilla y Zúñiga, 16th-century Spanish poet and soldier, who distinguished himself in the campaign in Chile against the Araucanians, inspiration for the epic poem La Araucana | MPC · 3114 |
3115 Baily | 1981 PL | Francis Baily, 18th–19th-century English astronomer, one of the founders of the Royal Astronomical Society, and namesake of Baily's beads | MPC · 3115 |
3116 Goodricke | 1983 CF | John Goodricke, 18th-century Dutch-English deaf-mute astronomer, who identified Algol as an eclipsing variable and discovered δ Cephei | MPC · 3116 |
3117 Niépce | 1983 CM1 | Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, 18th–19th-century French photography pioneer | MPC · 3117 |
3118 Claytonsmith | 1974 OD | Clayton Albert Smith (1934–1993), American astrometrist, director of the Yale-Columbia Southern Observatory and later the United States Naval Observatory's astrometry department | MPC · 3118 |
3119 Dobronravin | 1972 YX | Petr Pavlovich Dobronravin, Russian astrophysicist and spectroscopist, deputy director of the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory 1952–1969 | MPC · 3119 |
3120 Dangrania | 1979 RZ | Daniil Aleksandrovich Granin, 20th-century Russian writer | MPC · 3120 |
3121 Tamines | 1981 EV | Tamines, Belgium, now called (Sambreville) | MPC · 3121 |
3122 Florence | 1981 ET3 | Florence Nightingale, English nurse and hospital reformer | MPC · 3122 |
3123 Dunham | 1981 QF2 | David W. Dunham, American astronomer, organizer of the International Occultation Timing Association | MPC · 3123 |
3124 Kansas | 1981 VB | Kansas, United States, the discoverer's home state, and also the University of Kansas, the discoverer's alma mater, to commemorate the centennial of observational astronomy there, which began with the purchase of an Alvan Clark 6-inch refractor in 1885 | MPC · 3124 |
3125 Hay | 1982 BJ1 | William Thompson Hay (1888–1949), British music-hall comedian, film star of the 1930s and early 1940s, and amateur astronomer, (re)discoverer of Saturn's Great White Spot in 1933 | MPC · 3125 |
3126 Davydov | 1969 TP1 | Denis Vasil'evich Davydov (1784–1839), Russian officer, writer and poet, hero of the Patriotic War of 1812 | MPC · 3126 |
3127 Bagration | 1973 ST4 | Petr Ivanovich Bagration, 18th–19th-century Russian (of Georgian descent) general, hero of the Patriotic War of 1812 who died at the Battle of Borodino | MPC · 3127 |
3128 Obruchev | 1979 FJ2 | Vladimir Afanasjevich Obruchev, 19th–20th-century Russian geologist, geographer, and author of popular books on science and science-fiction novels | MPC · 3128 |
3129 Bonestell | 1979 MK2 | Chesley Bonestell, American space artist. Named following a competition organized by the Planetary Society | MPC · 3129 |
3130 Hillary | 1981 YO | Sir Edmund Hillary, British mountaineer | MPC · 3130 |
3131 Mason-Dixon | 1982 BM1 | Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, 18th-century British astronomers who observed the 1761 transit of Venus from the Cape of Good Hope, and later (1763–1767) surveyed the boundary between Pennsylvania and Maryland, the Mason–Dixon line | MPC · 3131 |
3132 Landgraf | 1940 WL | Werner Landgraf, German astronomer, who established the orbit (and whose initials appear in the provisional designation) | MPC · 3132 |
3133 Sendai | A907 TC | Sendai, Japan, the "Heidelberg of the East" (this object was discovered from Heidelberg) and the Sendai Municipal Astronomical Observatory | MPC · 3133 |
3134 Kostinsky | A921 VA | Sergej Konstantinovich Kostinsky (1867–1936), Russian astronomer, after whom the "Kostinsky effect" is named | MPC · 3134 |
3135 Lauer | 1981 EC9 | Tod R. Lauer, American astronomer, who participated in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey while an undergraduate student at Caltech | MPC · 3135 |
3136 Anshan | 1981 WD4 | Anshan, Liaoning, China | MPC · 3136 |
3137 Horky | 1982 SM1 | Czech hill, site of Antonín Mrkos' first telescope | MPC · 3137 |
3138 Ciney | 1980 KL | Ciney, Belgium, chief town of the Condroz, where the discoverer maintains a residence | MPC · 3138 |
3139 Shantou | 1980 VL1 | Shantou, Guangdong, China | MPC · 3139 |
3140 Stellafane | 1983 AO | Stellafane, the annual Vermont star party organized by the "Springfield Telescope Makers" | MPC · 3140 |
3141 Buchar | 1984 RH | Emil Buchar (1901–1979), Czech discoverer of minor planets and pioneer of satellite geodesy | MPC · 3141 |
3142 Kilopi | 1937 AC | Kilopi, or 1000 × π, which rounds off to 3142, the number assigned to this minor planet | MPC · 3142 |
3143 Genecampbell | 1980 UA | I. Gene Campbell, American systems programmer in the central computing facility at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics | MPC · 3143
Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Skytel Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok. Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.
Analytika
Antropológia Aplikované vedy Bibliometria Dejiny vedy Encyklopédie Filozofia vedy Forenzné vedy Humanitné vedy Knižničná veda Kryogenika Kryptológia Kulturológia Literárna veda Medzidisciplinárne oblasti Metódy kvantitatívnej analýzy Metavedy Metodika Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative
Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších
podmienok. www.astronomia.sk | www.biologia.sk | www.botanika.sk | www.dejiny.sk | www.economy.sk | www.elektrotechnika.sk | www.estetika.sk | www.farmakologia.sk | www.filozofia.sk | Fyzika | www.futurologia.sk | www.genetika.sk | www.chemia.sk | www.lingvistika.sk | www.politologia.sk | www.psychologia.sk | www.sexuologia.sk | www.sociologia.sk | www.veda.sk I www.zoologia.sk |