Marco Micheli

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Born1983 (age 4142)
Fieldsastronomy, planetary science
Marco Micheli
Born1983 (age 4142)
Alma materUniversity of Pisa
Scientific career
Fieldsastronomy, planetary science
InstitutionsESA Centre for Earth Observation
Pan-STARRS

Marco Micheli (born 1983) is an Italian astronomer and a discoverer of minor planets. He is a researcher at the Centre for Earth Observation of ESA's Space Situational Awareness Programme in Italy.[1]

List of discovered minor planets

Micheli was born in Brescia, Italy, in 1983. He graduated in 2007 in astronomy and astrophysics at the University of Pisa with a thesis on the YORP effect, and moved for his doctorate to the University of Hawaii where he studied Near-Earth objects and how their streams cause meteor showers.[2] He then moved to ESA's Centre for Earth Observation in Frascati, Italy.[3]

As a member of the Pan-STARRS astronomical survey team, he holds the record of new asteroids detected in a single night since 29 January 2011.[4] According to the Minor Planet Center (MPC) he discovered between 2005 and 2010 twelve asteroids, partly in collaboration with Wladimiro Marinello and Gianpaolo Pizzetti (see list).

In June 2018 he published a study on 1I/ʻOumuamua, the first Interstellar object, where the discovery of a non-gravitational acceleration acting on the object is reported. This suggests that the celestial body may be a comet, although it has not shown any noticeable activity in the visual spectrum during transit in the Solar System.[5][6]

177853 Lumezzane5 August 2005list[A]
229836 Wladimarinello28 August 2009list[A]
233559 Pizzetti4 August 2007list[B]
266710 Pedrettiadriana[7]31 August 2009list
(284994) 2010 KD6020 May 2010list
352148 Tarcisiozani4 August 2007list[A]
(379472) 2010 DT4016 February 2010list
(406983) 2009 RE514 September 2009list
(407261) 2010 BQ321 January 2010list
(436214) 2009 XR2213 December 2009list
(485044) 2010 AA7815 January 2010list
(485914) 2012 GZ1513 December 2010list
Co-discovery made with:
A G. P. Pizzetti and B W. Marinello

Awards and honors

Asteroid 10277 Micheli, discovered by American astronomer Schelte Bus at the Siding Spring Observatory in 1981, was named in his honor. The official naming citation was published by the MPC on 13 April 2017 (M.P.C. 103974).[1][8]

See also

References

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