Yoshiaki Oshima

Yoshiaki Oshima (大島 良明, Ōshima Yoshiaki) (born 1952) is a Japanese astronomer at Gekko Observatory and prolific discoverer of 61 asteroids as credited by the Minor Planet Center, and include the binary asteroid 4383 Suruga, the potentially hazardous object (7753) 1988 XB and the Jupiter trojan (4715) 1989 TS1.[1][2]

Minor planets discovered: 61[1]
see § List of discovered minor planets

International asteroid monitoring project

Japan Spaceguard Association (JSGA) is keen to have astronomical education for young people and held Spaceguard Private Investigator of the Stars— the fugitives are asteroids! program in 2001. Yoshiaki Oshima participated as one of the committee member. JSGA submitted a paper on that project in a proceedings, with Oshima as a contributor.[3] [Notes 1]

JSGA held an astronomical education program as part of their International Asteroid Monitoring Project, that collaborated with the British Council and its International Schools' Observatory (ISO) program which had involved 12 teams of junior high to senior high school classes from Asian and European countries.[Notes 2]

The Private Investigator of Stars was co-sponsored by the British Council which advised the International Asteroid Monitoring Project by coordinating observatory in the Canary islands and participating laboratories for ISO. Yomiuri Shinbun newspaper held an asteroid hunting contest for the JSGA and run articles on their pages. 438 school classes and other teams signed up with 1,317 indibivisuals, and 133 teams reported the results of their observation.

JSGA based its project headquarters in its observatory called Bisei Spaceguard Center, owned by the Japan Space Forum. An optical telescope on the Canary island has been operated by the staff of Astrophysics Research Institute at John Moore University in Liverpool, and images were transmitted to each classroom via internet connection.[Notes 3]

Honors

The outer main-belt asteroid 5592 Oshima is named after him. The naming citation also mentions his contribution to the development of the instrumentation at the Nihondaira Observatory.[2]

List of discovered minor planets

In 1988, Oshima discovered (7753) 1988 XB, a near-Earth object and potentially hazardous asteroid that approaches the orbit of Earth as close as 2.5 lunar distances. He also discovered (4715) 1989 TS1, a 64-kilometer sized Jupiter trojan in 1989. By the end of the same year, he discovered 4383 Suruga a binary with a minor-planet moon. All discoveries he made at the Gekko Observatory (see table below).

3843 OISCA28 February 1987list
4157 Izu11 December 1988list
4261 Gekko28 January 1989list
4293 Masumi1 November 1989list
4383 Suruga1 December 1989list
4403 Kuniharu2 March 1987list
(4715) 1989 TS19 October 1989list
4840 Otaynang23 October 1989list
(5123) 1989 BL28 January 1989list
5206 Kodomonomori7 March 1988list
(5258) 1989 AU11 January 1989list
5282 Yamatotakeru2 November 1988list
(5353) 1989 YT20 December 1989list
5397 Vojislava14 November 1988list
5730 Yonosuke13 October 1988list
5740 Toutoumi29 November 1989list
(5810) 1988 EN10 March 1988list
(6903) 1989 XM2 December 1989list
(7284) 1989 VW4 November 1989list
(7569) 1989 BK28 January 1989list
(7753) 1988 XB5 December 1988list
(8008) 1988 TQ410 October 1988list
(8157) 1988 XG215 December 1988list
(8349) 1988 DH119 February 1988list
(9174) 1989 WC327 November 1989list
(9314) 1988 DJ119 February 1988list
(9320) 1988 VN311 November 1988list
(9940) 1988 VM311 November 1988list
(10065) 1988 XK3 December 1988list
(10299) 1988 VS313 November 1988list
(10751) 1989 UV129 October 1989list
(11034) 1988 TG9 October 1988list
(11035) 1988 VQ312 November 1988list
(11862) 1988 XB27 December 1988list
(12251) 1988 TO19 October 1988list
(12693) 1989 EZ9 March 1989list
13934 Kannami11 December 1988list
14843 Tanna12 November 1988list
(14860) 1989 WD327 November 1989list
(15243) 1989 TU19 October 1989list
(16426) 1988 EC7 March 1988list
(16434) 1988 VO311 November 1988list
(16436) 1988 XL3 December 1988list
(16458) 1989 WZ221 November 1989list
(17426) 1989 CS15 February 1989list
(18346) 1989 WG20 November 1989list
(19134) 1988 TQ115 October 1988list
(21018) 1988 VV12 November 1988list
(21021) 1988 XL27 December 1988list
(21034) 1989 WB325 November 1989list
(26099) 1989 WH20 November 1989list
(27715) 1989 CR15 February 1989list
(27721) 1989 WJ20 November 1989list
(30794) 1988 TR115 October 1988list
(32785) 1989 CU110 February 1989list
(32795) 1989 WA321 November 1989list
(35074) 1989 UF125 October 1989list
(37569) 1989 UG23 October 1989list
(37570) 1989 UD125 October 1989list
(37571) 1989 UE125 October 1989list
(69274) 1989 UZ129 October 1989list

Works

  • Isobe, S., Atsuo, A., Asher, D., Fuse, T., Hashimoto, N., Nakano, S., K. Nishiyama, Yoshiaki Oshima, Noritsugu Takahashi, J. Terazono, H. Umehara, Takeshi Urata, Makoto Yoshikawa. "Educational program of Japan Spaceguard Association using asteroid search", Spaceguard Detective Agency, Proceedings of Asteroids, Comets, Meteors – ACM 2002. International Conference, 29 July – 2 August 2002

See also

Notes

  1. The Spaceguard Private Investigator of the Stars, an asteroid monitoring program for the youth, was made possible by the special cooperation by the Japan Space Forum, as well as sponsorship from Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, National Space Development Agency of Japan along with John Moore University and Armar Observatory in the UK.[4]
  2. UK has "National Schools' Observatory", an astronomical education for young people, which is held with John Moore University in Liverpool. The University operates a robotic telescope in the Canary Islands, and schools are allowed that they carry out scientific research using the remote telescope.[5][6]
  3. The participating teams were supplied with a computer program "Aarteroid Catcher B-612" that JSGA developed to compare images of asteroids in the night sky. Each team will receive images from the Canary Island telescope and compare them with JSGAs' images, and the mission was monitoring asteroid collision and perhaps unknown asteroids.[7] The contest was due 4 March 2001, and Japan Spaceguard Association (JSGA) examined 133 reports for 10 days. On 14 March, the jury meeting was held, and winners were announced on Yomiuri Shinbun on 20 March. Award overview, assessment comments as well as presentation report, interviews to recipients, along with JSGA's prospects for future astronomic education and asteroid hunting projects.[4]

References

  1. "Minor Planet Discoverers (by number)". Minor Planet Center. 31 May 2018. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  2. Schmadel, Lutz D. (2007). "(5592) Oshima". Dictionary of Minor Planet Names – (5592) Oshima. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. p. 475. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-29925-7_5312. ISBN 978-3-540-00238-3.
  3. Clarke, Chandra K. "Space Exploration Advocacy in the 21st Century: The Case for Participatory Science" (PDF) (PDF). citizensciencecenter.com: 27. Retrieved 15 October 2016. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. "国際小惑星監視プロジェクト 入賞者決まる" [Recipient of International Asteroid Monitoring Project is announced]. Yomiuri shinbun. 27 March 2001. Archived from the original on 9 February 2007. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  5. "Teacher Zone, National Schools' Observatory". Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  6. "JSGA's project named "Private Investigaters of Stars – the fugitives are the asteroids!"". Japan Spaceguard Association. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  7. "New publication: part2". Japan Spaceguard Association. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.