25,000
50,000
75,000
100,000
125,000
150,000
'90
'95
2000
'05
'10
'15
Yearly number of provisional minor planet designations assigned by the MPC since 1990. As of May 2019, a total of 1,426,477 designations have been assigned since 1869.[1]

Provisional designation in astronomy is the naming convention applied to astronomical objects immediately following their discovery. The provisional designation is usually superseded by a permanent designation once a reliable orbit has been calculated. Approximately 47% of the more than 1,100,000 known minor planets[2] remain provisionally designated, as hundreds of thousands have been discovered in the last two decades.[3]

Minor planets

The current system of provisional designation of minor planets (asteroids, centaurs and trans-Neptunian objects) has been in place since 1925. It superseded several previous conventions, each of which was in turn rendered obsolete by the increasing numbers of minor planet discoveries. A modern or new-style provisional designation consists of the year of discovery, followed by two letters and, possibly, a suffixed number.[4]

New-style provisional designation

For example, the provisional designation 1992 QB1(15760 Albion) stands for the 27th body identified during 16-31 Aug 1992:

  • 1992 – the first element indicates the year of discovery.
  • Q – the first letter indicates the half-month of the object's discovery within that year and ranges from A (first half of January) to Y (second half of December), while the letters I and Z are not used (see table below). The first half is always the 1st through to the 15th of the month, regardless of the numbers of days in the second "half". Thus, Q indicates the period from Aug 16 to 31.[4][5]
  • B1 – the second letter and a numerical suffix indicate the order of discovery within that half-month. The first 25 discoveries of the half-month only receive a letter (A to Z) without a suffix, while the letter I is not used (to avoid potential confusions with the digit 1). Because modern techniques typically yield hundreds if not thousands of discoveries per half-month, the subscript number is appended to indicate the number of times that the letters from A to Z have cycled through. The suffix 1 indicates 1 completed cycles (1 cycles × 25 letters = 25), while B is the 2nd position in the current cycle. Thus, B1 stands for the 27th minor planet discovered in a half-month.
  • The packed form of 1992 QB1 is written as J92Q01B.
First letter[4][5]
ABCDEFGHJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXY
JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMayJuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovemberDecember
1–1516–311–1516–291–1516–311–1516–301–1516–311–1516–301–1516–311–1516–311–1516–301–1516–311–1516–301–1516–31
Second letter
ABCDEFGHJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
12345678910111213141516171819202122232425
Subscript
none123456789101112...n
025507510012515017520022525027530025n

This scheme is now also used retrospectively for pre-1925 discoveries. For these, the first digit of the year is replaced by an A.[4] For example, A801 AA indicates the first object discovered in the first half of January 1801 (1 Ceres).[6]

Further explanations

  • During the first half-month of January 2014, the first minor planet identification was assigned the provisional designation 2014 AA. Then the assignment continued to the end of the cycle at 2014 AZ, which was in turn followed by the first identification of the second cycle, 2014 AA1. The assignment in this second cycle continued with 2014 AB1, 2014 AC1, 2014 AD1... until 2014 AZ1, and then was continued with 2014 AA2 the first item in the third cycle. With the beginning of a new half-month on 16 January 2014, the first letter changed to "B", and the series started with 2014 BA.
  • An idiosyncrasy of this system is that the second letter is listed before the number, even though the second letter is considered "least-significant". This is in contrast to most of the world's numbering systems. This idiosyncrasy is not seen, however, in the so-called packed form (packed designation).
  • A packed designation has no spaces. It may also use letters to codify for the designation's year and subscript number. It is frequently used in online and electronic documents. For example, the provisional designation 2007 TA418 is written as K07Tf8A in the packed form, where "K07" stands for the year 2007, and "f8" for the subscript number 418.
  • 90377 Sedna, a large trans-Neptunian object, had the provisional designation 2003 VB12, meaning it was identified in the first half of November 2003 (as indicated by the letter "V"), and that it was the 302nd object identified during that time, as 12 cycles of 25 letters give 300, and the letter "B" is the second position in the current cycle.
  • Survey designations do not follow the rules for new-style provisional designations.
  • For technical reasons, such as ASCII limitations, the numerical suffix is not always subscripted, but sometimes "flattened out", so that 1989 SG1 can also be written as 1989 SG1.
  • A very busy half month was the second half of January 2015 (letter "B"), which saw a total of 14,208 new minor planet identifications as of May 2019. One of the last assignments in this period was 2015 BH568 and corresponds to the 14,208th position in the sequence.[1]

Survey designations

Minor planets discovered during the Palomar–Leiden survey including three subsequent Trojan-campaigns, which altogether discovered more than 4,000 asteroids and Jupiter trojans between 1960 and 1977,[7] have custom designations that consist of a number (order in the survey) followed by a space and one of the following identifiers:[4][5]

  • P-L  Palomar–Leiden survey (1960–1970)
  • T-1  Palomar–Leiden Trojan survey (1971)
  • T-2  Palomar–Leiden Trojan survey (1973)
  • T-3  Palomar–Leiden Trojan survey (1977)

For example, the asteroid 6344 P-L is the 6344th minor planet in the original Palomar–Leiden survey, while the asteroid 4835 T-1 was discovered during the first Trojan-campaign. The majority of these bodies have since been assigned a number and many are already named.

Historical designations

The first four minor planets were discovered in the early 19th century, after which there was a lengthy gap before the discovery of the fifth. Astronomers initially had no reason to believe that there would be countless thousands of minor planets, and strove to assign a symbol to each new discovery, in the tradition of the symbols used for the major planets. For example, 1 Ceres was assigned a stylized sickle (⚳), 2 Pallas a stylized lance or spear (⚴), 3 Juno a scepter (⚵), and 4 Vesta an altar with a sacred fire ().[8] All had various graphic forms, some of considerable complexity.

It soon became apparent, though, that continuing to assign symbols was impractical and provided no assistance when the number of known minor planets was in the dozens. Johann Franz Encke introduced a new system in the Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch (BAJ) for 1854, published in 1851, in which he used encircled numbers instead of symbols. Encke's system began the numbering with Astrea which was given the number (1) and went through (11) Eunomia, while Ceres, Pallas, Juno and Vesta continued to be denoted by symbols, but in the following year's BAJ, the numbering was changed so that Astraea was number (5).

The new system found popularity among astronomers, and since then, the final designation of a minor planet is a number indicating its order of discovery followed by a name. Even after the adoption of this system, though, several more minor planets received symbols, including 28 Bellona the morning star and lance of Mars's martial sister,[9] 35 Leukothea an ancient lighthouse[10] and 37 Fides a Latin cross ().[11] According to Webster's A Dictionary of the English Language, four more minor planets were also given symbols: 16 Psyche, 17 Thetis, 26 Proserpina, and 29 Amphitrite.[12] However, there is no evidence that these symbols were ever used outside of their initial publication in the Astronomische Nachrichten.

134340 Pluto is an exception: it is a high-numbered minor planet that received a graphical symbol with significant astronomical use (♇), because it was considered a major planet on its discovery, and did not receive a minor planet number until 2006.

Graphical symbols continue to be used for some minor planets, and assigned for some recently discovered larger ones, mostly by astrologers (see astronomical symbol and astrological symbol). Three centaurs2060 Chiron, 5145 Pholus, and 7066 Nessus – and the other seven large trans-Neptunian dwarf planets – 50000 Quaoar, 90377 Sedna, 90482 Orcus, 136108 Haumea, 136199 Eris, 136472 Makemake, and 225088 Gonggong – have relatively standard symbols among astrologers: the symbols for Haumea, Makemake, and Eris have even been occasionally used in astronomy.[13] However, such symbols are generally not in use among astronomers.[14]

Genesis of the current system

Several different notation and symbolic schemes were used during the latter half of the nineteenth century, but the present form first appeared in the journal Astronomische Nachrichten (AN) in 1892. New numbers were assigned by the AN on receipt of a discovery announcement, and a permanent designation was then assigned once an orbit had been calculated for the new object.

At first, the provisional designation consisted of the year of discovery followed by a letter indicating the sequence of the discovery, but omitting the letter I (historically, sometimes J was omitted instead). Under this scheme, 333 Badenia was initially designated 1892 A, 163 Erigone was 1892 B, etc. In 1893, though, increasing numbers of discoveries forced the revision of the system to use double letters instead, in the sequence AA, AB... AZ, BA and so on. The sequence of double letters was not restarted each year, so that 1894 AQ followed 1893 AP and so on. In 1916, the letters reached ZZ and, rather than starting a series of triple-letter designations, the double-letter series was restarted with 1916 AA.[4]

Because a considerable amount of time could sometimes elapse between exposing the photographic plates of an astronomical survey and actually spotting a small Solar System object on them (witness the story of Phoebe's discovery), or even between the actual discovery and the delivery of the message (from some far-flung observatory) to the central authority, it became necessary to retrofit discoveries into the sequence — to this day, discoveries are still dated based on when the images were taken, and not on when a human realised they were looking at something new. In the double-letter scheme, this was not generally possible once designations had been assigned in a subsequent year. The scheme used to get round this problem was rather clumsy and used a designation consisting of the year and a lower-case letter in a manner similar to the old provisional-designation scheme for comets. For example, 1915 a (note that there is a space between the year and the letter to distinguish this designation from the old-style comet designation 1915a, Mellish's first comet of 1915), 1917 b. In 1914 designations of the form year plus Greek letter were used in addition.

Temporary minor planet designations

Temporary designations are custom designation given by an observer or discovering observatory prior to the assignment of a provisional designation by the MPC.[15] These intricate designations were used prior to the Digital Age, when communication was slow or even impossible (e.g. during WWI). The listed temporary designations by observatory/observer use uppercase and lowercase letters (LETTER, letter), digits, numbers and years, as well Roman numerals (ROM) and Greek letters (greek).[15]

ObservatoryTemp. designationExamples
Algiers Obs.Alger LETTERAlger A, Alger CM
Alg LETTERAlg A, Alg CM
Alma-AtaAlma-Ata [Nr.] numberAlma-Ata Nr. 1
year A number1952 A1, A1
ArequipaArequipa letterArequipa a
Areq letterAreq a
Arequipa numberArequipa 17
Areq numberAreq 17
Belgrade Obs.year letter [(Beograd)]1956 x (Beograd), 1956 x
letterx
Lowell Obs.
(Flagstaff)
A numberA0, A7
Heidelberg Obs.Wolf [Nr.] numberWolf Nr. 18, Wolf 18
Wolf letterWolf u
Wolf greekWolf alpha
Heid numberHeid 1, Heid 234
Johannesburg Obs.LETTERA, E
G numberG 1, G 21
T numberT 9, T 16
Kyoto-Kwasannumber1, 6
letterd
La Plata Obs.[La Plata] year ROMLa Plata 1951 I, 1951 I
[La Plata] year LETTERLa Plata 1950 G, 1950 G
Lick[Asteroid] LETTERAsteroid B, B
Mount Wilson Obs.[Asteroid] LETTERAsteroid A, A
LETTERD
Purple Mountain Obs.
(Nanking)
P.O. numberP.O. 32, P.O. 189
PO numberPO 32, PO 189
Crimean Astrophysical Obs.
(Nauchnij)
N numberN1
K numberK1, K3423
Simeiz Obs.[1942] SIGMA K number1942 SIGMA K1, SIGMA K1
[1942] SIG K number1942 SIG K1, SIG K1
sigma numbersigma 1, sigma 229
Taunton Obs.Taunton digitTaunton 83
Tokyo-MitakaTokyo LETTERTokyo B
Tokyo letterTokyo b
Tokyo numberTokyo 20
Tokyo year LETTERTokyo 1954 D
Turku Obs.T- numberT-1, T-774
Uccle Obs.letter [(Uccle)]p (Uccle), p
letter number [(Uccle)]x2 (Uccle), x2
[ year] U number1945 U 12, U 12
Washingtonyear W digit1917 W 15, 1923 W 21
Yerkes Obs.Y.O. numberY.O. 23
YO numberYO 23

Comets

The system used for comets was complex previous to 1995. Originally, the year was followed by a space and then a Roman numeral (indicating the sequence of discovery) in most cases, but difficulties always arose when an object needed to be placed between previous discoveries. For example, after Comet 1881 III and Comet 1881 IV might be reported, an object discovered in between the discovery dates but reported much later couldn't be designated "Comet 1881 III½". More commonly comets were known by the discoverer's name and the year. An alternate scheme also listed comets in order of time of perihelion passage, using lower-case letters; thus "Comet Faye" (modern designation 4P/Faye) was both Comet 1881 I (first comet to pass perihelion in 1881) and Comet 1880c (third comet to be discovered in 1880).

The system since 1995 is similar to the provisional designation of minor planets.[16] For comets, the provisional designation consists of the year of discovery, a space, one letter (unlike the minor planets with two) indicating the half-month of discovery within that year (A=first half of January, B=second half of January, etc. skipping I (to avoid confusion with the number 1 or the numeral I) and not reaching Z), and finally a number (not subscripted as with minor planets), indicating the sequence of discovery within the half-month. Thus, the eighth comet discovered in the second half of March 2006 would be given the provisional designation 2006 F8, whilst the tenth comet of late March would be 2006 F10.

If a comet splits, its segments are given the same provisional designation with a suffixed letter A, B, C, ..., Z, AA, AB, AC...

If an object is originally found asteroidal, and later develops a cometary tail, it retains its asteroidal designation. For example, minor planet 1954 PC turned out to be Comet Faye, and we thus have "4P/1954 PC" as one of the designations of said comet. Similarly, minor planet 1999 RE70 was reclassified as a comet, and because it was discovered by LINEAR, it is now known as 176P/LINEAR (LINEAR 52) and (118401) LINEAR.

Provisional designations for comets are given condensed or "packed form" in the same manner as minor planets. 2006 F8, if a periodic comet, would be listed in the IAU Minor Planet Database as PK06F080. The last character is purposely a zero, as that allows comet and minor planet designations not to overlap.

Periodic comets

Comets are assigned one of four possible prefixes as a rough classification. The prefix "P" (as in, for example, P/1997 C1, a.k.a. Comet Gehrels 4) designates a "periodic comet", one which has an orbital period of less than 200 years or which has been observed during more than a single perihelion passage (e.g. 153P/Ikeya-Zhang, whose period is 367 years). They receive a permanent number prefix after their second observed perihelion passage (see List of periodic comets).[17]

Non-periodic comets

Comets which do not fulfill the "periodic" requirements receive the "C" prefix (e.g. C/2006 P1, the Great Comet of 2007). Comets initially labeled as "non-periodic" may, however, switch to "P" if they later fulfill the requirements.

Comets which have been lost or have disintegrated are prefixed "D" (e.g. D/1993 F2, Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9).

Finally, comets for which no reliable orbit could be calculated, but are known from historical records, are prefixed "X" as in, for example, X/1106 C1. (Also see List of non-periodic comets and List of hyperbolic comets.)

Satellites and rings of planets

When satellites or rings are first discovered, they are given provisional designations such as "S/2000 J 11" (the 11th new satellite of Jupiter discovered in 2000), "S/2005 P 1" (the first new satellite of Pluto discovered in 2005), or "R/2004 S 2" (the second new ring of Saturn discovered in 2004). The initial "S/" or "R/" stands for "satellite" or "ring", respectively, distinguishing the designation from the prefixes "C/", "D/", "P/", and "X/" used for comets. These designations are sometimes written as "S/2005 P1", dropping the second space.

The prefix "S/" indicates a natural satellite, and is followed by a year (using the year when the discovery image was acquired, not necessarily the date of discovery). A one-letter code written in upper case identifies the planet such as J and S for Jupiter and Saturn, respectively (see list of one-letter abbreviations), and then a number identifies sequentially the observation. For example, Naiad, the innermost moon of Neptune, was at first designated "S/1989 N 6". Later, once its existence and orbit were confirmed, it received its full designation, "Neptune III Naiad".

The Roman numbering system arose with the very first discovery of natural satellites other than Earth's Moon: Galileo referred to the Galilean moons as I through IV (counting from Jupiter outward), in part to spite his rival Simon Marius, who had proposed the names now adopted. Similar numbering schemes naturally arose with the discovery of moons around Saturn and Uranus. Although the numbers initially designated the moons in orbital sequence, new discoveries soon failed to conform with this scheme (e.g. "Jupiter V" is Amalthea, which orbits closer to Jupiter than does Io). The unstated convention then became, at the close of the 19th century, that the numbers more or less reflected the order of discovery, except for prior historical exceptions (see the Timeline of discovery of Solar System planets and their natural satellites). The convention has been extended to natural satellites of minor planets, such as "(87) Sylvia I Romulus".

Moons of minor planets

The provisional designation system for minor planet satellites, such as asteroid moons, follows that established for the satellites of the major planets. With minor planets, the planet letter code is replaced by the minor planet number in parentheses. Thus, the first observed moon of 87 Sylvia, discovered in 2001, was at first designated S/2001 (87) 1, later receiving its permanent designation of (87) Sylvia I Romulus. Where more than one moon has been discovered, Roman numerals specify the discovery sequence, so that Sylvia's second moon is designated (87) Sylvia II Remus.

Since Pluto was reclassified in 2006, discoveries of Plutonian moons since then follow the minor-planet system: thus Nix and Hydra, discovered in 2005, were S/2005 P 2 and S/2005 P 1, but Kerberos and Styx, discovered in 2011 and 2012 respectively, were S/2011 (134340) 1 and S/2012 (134340) 1. That said, there has been some unofficial use of the formats "S/2011 P 1" and "S/2012 P 1".[18][19]

Packed designation

Packed designations are used in online and electronic documents as well as databases.

Packed minor planet designation

The Orbit Database (MPCORB)[20] of the Minor Planet Center (MPC) uses the "packed form" to refer to all provisionally designated minor planets.[21] The idiosyncrasy found in the new-style provisional designations, no longer exists in this packed-notation system, as the second letter is now listed after the subscript number, or its equivalent 2-digit code. For an introduction on provisional minor planet designations in the "un-packed" form, see § New-style provisional designation.

Provisional packed designations

The system of packed provisional minor planet designations:[22]

  • uses exactly 7 characters with no spaces for all designations
  • compacts 4 digit years to a 3-character code, e.g. 2014 is written as K14 (see tables below)
  • converts all subscript numbers to a 2-character code (00 is used when there is no following subscript, 99 is used for subscript 99, A0 is used for subscript 100, and A1 is used for 101)
  • the packed 2 character subscript code is placed between the half-month letter and the second (discovery order) letter (e.g. 2016 EK102 has discovery order K102 so the last three characters for its packed form are A2K)

Contrary to the new-style system, the letter "i" is used in the packed form both for the year and the numeric suffix.[22] The compacting system provides upper and lowercase letters to encode up to 619 "cycles". This means that 15,500 designations ( = 619×25 + 25) within a half-month can be packed, which is a few times more than the designations assigned monthly in recent years.[1]

Examples
  1. 1995 XA is written as J95X00A
  2. 1995 XL1 is written as J95X01L
  3. 2016 EK156 is written as K16EF6K
  4. 2007 TA418 is written as K07Tf8A
Description
  1. The year 1995 is compacted to J95. As it has no subscript number, 00 is used as placeholder instead, and directly placed after the half-month letter "X".
  2. The year 1995 is compacted to J95. Subscript number "1" is padded to 01 to maintain the length of 7 characters, and placed after the first letter.
  3. The year 2016 is compacted to K16. The subscript number "156" exceeds 2 digits and is converted to F6, (see table below)
  4. The year 2007 is compacted to K07. The subscript number "418" exceeds 2 digits and is converted to f8, (see table below)
Conversion tables
Compacting first two digits of year[22]
IJKL...
1800s1900s2000s2100s...
Compacting 3-digit subscript numbers[22]
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQR
100s110s120s130s140s150s160s170s180s190s200s210s220s230s240s250s260s270s
STUVWXYZabcdefghij
280s290s300s310s320s330s340s350s360s370s380s390s400s410s420s430s440s450s
klmnopqrstuvwxyz
460s470s480s490s500s510s520s530s540s550s560s570s580s590s600s610s

Comets follow the minor-planet scheme for their first four characters. The fifth and sixth characters encode the number. The seventh character is usually 0, unless it is a component of a split comet, in which case it encodes in lowercase the letter of the fragment.[22]

Examples
  1. 1995 A1 is written as J95A010
  2. 1995 P1-B is written as J95P01b (i.e. fragment B of comet 1995 P1)
  3. 2088 A103 is written as K88AA30 (as the subscript number exceeds two digits and is converted according to the above table).

There is also an extended form that adds five characters to the front. The fifth character is one of "C", "D", "P", or "X", according to the status of the comet. If the comet is periodic, then the first four characters are the periodic-comet number (padded to the left with zeroes); otherwise, they are blank.[22]

Natural satellites use the format for comets, except that the last column is always 0.[22]

Packed survey designations

Survey designations used during the Palomar–Leiden Survey (PLS) have a simpler packed form, as for example:[1]

  • 6344 P-L is written as PLS6344
  • 4835 T-1 is written as T1S4835
  • 1010 T-2 is written as T2S1010
  • 4101 T-3 is written as T3S4101

Note that the survey designations are distinguished from provisional designations by having the letter S in the third character, which contains a decimal digit in provisional designations and permanent numbers.

Permanent packed designations

A packed form for permanent designations also exists (these are numbered minor planets, with or without a name). In this case, only the designation's number is used and converted to a 5-character string. The rest of the permanent designation is ignored. Minor planet numbers below 100,000 are simply zero-padded to 5 digits from the left side. For minor planets above 100,000, a single letter (A–Z and a–z) is used, similar as for the provisional subscript number (also see table above):[22]

  • A covers the number range 100,000–109,999
  • B covers the number range 110,000–119,999
  • a covers the number range 360,000–369,999
  • z covers the number range 610,000–619,999
Examples

This system permits compression of numbers up to 619,999 (z9999).[22] As of January 2023 the list of minor planets already contains 619,150 objects.[3] For minor planets numbered 620,000 or higher, a tilde "~" will be used as the first character. The subsequent 4 characters encoded in Base62 (using 0–9, then A–Z, and a–z, in this specific order) are used to store the difference of the object's number minus 620,000. This extended system will allow for the encoding of more than 15 million minor planet numbers. For example:[22]

  • (620000) will be represented as ~0000 (620,000 − 620,000 = 0 = 0 × 623 + 0 × 622 + 0 × 621 + 0 × 620)
  • (620061) will be represented as ~000z (620,061 − 620,000 = 61 = 0 × 623 + 0 × 622 + 0 × 621 + 61 × 620)
  • (3140113) will be represented as ~AZaz (3,140,113 − 620,000 = 2,520,113 = 10 × 623 + 35 × 622 + 36 × 621 + 61 × 620)
  • (15396335) will be represented as ~zzzz (15,396,335 − 620,000 = 14,776,335 = 61 × 623 + 61 × 622 + 61 × 621 + 61 × 620)

For comets, permanent designations only apply to periodic comets that are seen to return. The first four characters are the number of the comet (left-padded with zeroes). The fifth character is "P", unless the periodic comet is lost or defunct, in which case it is "D".[22]

For natural satellites, permanent packed designations take the form of the planet letter, then three digits containing the converted Roman numeral (left-padded with zeroes), and finally an "S". For example, Jupiter XIII Leda is J013S, and Neptune II Nereid is N002S.[22]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Provisional Designations – (statistics)". IAU Minor Planet Center. 23 May 2019. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  2. "Running Tallies – Minor Planets Discovered". IAU Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  3. 1 2 "Minor Planet Statistics – Orbits And Names". Minor Planet Center. 10 July 2017. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "New- And Old-Style Minor Planet Designations". IAU Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  5. 1 2 3 "Minor Planet Names: Readme". Institute of Applied Astronomy of the Russian Academy of Sciences. 17 January 2013. Archived from the original on 16 April 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  6. "JPL Small-Body Database Browser: 1 Ceres (A801 AA)". Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  7. "Minor Planet Discoverers". Minor Planet Center. 28 December 2015. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
  8. J. Hilton (2001). "When Did the Asteroids Become Minor Planets?". US Naval Observatory (USNO). Archived from the original on 13 November 2011.
  9. "1854AN 38..143 Page 143/144". Adsbit.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
  10. "1855AN 40..373K Page 373/374". Adsbit.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
  11. Porter, Noah (1884). Webster's Complete Dictionary of the English Language. p. 1780. ISBN 1-881275-24-8.
  12. JPL/NASA (April 22, 2015). "What is a Dwarf Planet?". Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved 2021-09-24.
  13. Miller, Kirk (26 October 2021). "Unicode request for dwarf-planet symbols" (PDF). unicode.org.
  14. 1 2 "Temporary Minor Planet Designations". IAU Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
  15. Cometary Designation System
  16. "Cometary Designation System". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 2011-07-03.
  17. Scott S. Sheppard, Pluto Moons
  18. New Horizons news, Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, "Fourth Moon Adds to Pluto's Appeal" Archived 2014-11-13 at the Wayback Machine, 20 July 2011
  19. "The MPC Orbit (MPCORB) Database". IAU Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  20. "Export Format for Minor-Planet Orbits". IAU Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  21. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "Packed Provisional and Permanent Designations". IAU Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
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