Shōhei Suzuki

Shōhei Suzuki (鈴木 正平, Suzuki Shōhei) is a Japanese astronomer and a discoverer of minor planets.

Minor planets discovered: 52[1]
see § List of discovered minor planets

In collaboration with Japanese astronomer Masanori Hirasawa, Suzuki discovered 52 numbered minor planets at Mount Nyukasa Station between 1991 and 1998.[1] Both men are graduates of Waseda University, which they named an asteroid after in 1991.[2]

List of discovered minor planets

9350 Waseda[1]October 13, 1991
14425 Fujimimachi[1]October 13, 1991
8530 Korbokkur[1]October 25, 1992
6499 Michiko[1]October 27, 1992
9197 Endo[1]November 24, 1992
6918 Manaslu[1]March 20, 1993
(15336) 1993 UC3[1]October 22, 1993
(15797) 1993 UD3[1]October 22, 1993
(58284) 1993 VW3[1]November 14, 1993
6416 Nyukasayama[1]November 14, 1993
8702 Nakanishi[1]November 14, 1993
(15798) 1993 VZ4[1]November 14, 1993
(27826) 1993 WQ[1]November 22, 1993
8100 Nobeyama[1]December 4, 1993
7067 Kiyose[1]December 4, 1993
7028 Tachikawa[1]December 5, 1993
9386 Hitomi[1]December 5, 1993
(39612) 1993 XE1[1]December 5, 1993
(27827) 1993 XJ1[1]December 9, 1993
8200 Souten[1]January 7, 1994
10837 Yuyakekoyake[1]March 6, 1994
22385 Fujimoriboshi[1]March 14, 1994
(19246) 1994 EL7[1]March 14, 1994
7891 Fuchie[1]November 11, 1994
8551 Daitarabochi[1]November 11, 1994
(15352) 1994 VB7[1]November 11, 1994
(19254) 1994 VD7[1]November 11, 1994
(30962) 1994 VH7[1]November 11, 1994
7892 Musamurahigashi[1]November 27, 1994
7353 Kazuya[1]January 6, 1995
(14495) 1995 AK1[1]January 6, 1995
(30968) 1995 AM1[1]January 6, 1995
(32914) 1995 AG1[1]January 6, 1995
(37675) 1995 AJ1[1]January 6, 1995
(15833) 1995 CL1[1]February 3, 1995
(29342) 1995 CF1[1]February 3, 1995
14036 Yasuhirotoyama[1]March 5, 1995
(14037) 1995 EZ7[1]March 5, 1995
(18457) 1995 EX7[1]March 5, 1995
10171 Takaotengu[1]March 7, 1995
(16704) 1995 ED8[1]March 7, 1995
13162 Ryokkochigaku[1]October 22, 1995
(23591) 1995 UP44[1]October 26, 1995
(20114) 1995 UQ44[1]October 26, 1995
(39659) 1995 UO44[1]October 26, 1995
10617 Takumi[1]October 25, 1997
(15919) 1997 UA22[1]October 25, 1997
(26982) 1997 UY21[1]October 25, 1997
35371 Yokonozaki[1]October 25, 1997
(42599) 1997 UT22[1]October 25, 1997
(14999) 1997 VX8[1]November 9, 1997
(28223) 1998 YR27[1]December 27, 1998
1 co-discovered with Masanori Hirasawa
gollark: Yes, that is actually B.
gollark: Advantages of 128-character full-charset names:- /view/n/ pages would still only hold one unique dragon- greater opportunities for creativity via use of anomalous Unicode- essentially infinite quantity of available names- can reuse names through use of invisible characters and/or homoglyphs- more efficient lyrical lineages - fewer dragons required per word- could store 2048 bits of data per name via base65536- can name them after people/things in other languagesDisadvantages:~~- cannot actually distinguish some names without a hexdump or something- pretty hard for people to actually use without knowledge of ridiculous Unicode stuff~~ none whatsoever
gollark: Yep!
gollark: "Bob" and "Bοb" for instance.
gollark: That way, if you want to use a name which has already been used, just use an identical-looking Unicode character!

References

  1. "Minor Planet Discoverers (by number)". Minor Planet Center. 22 June 2016. Retrieved 15 August 2016.
  2. 9350 Waseda. JPL Small-Body Database Browser. Retrieved 2009-04-14.


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