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User:Renerpho

Did you know ... that Edward Thonen, one of the miners killed in the Eureka Rebellion, had gained notoriety in England as a jewellery thief prior to his emigration to Australia? On the main page on 17 December 2022
Did you know ... that archaeologists read an ancient inscription by "unrolling" it virtually? On the main page on 4 January 2025
Did you know ... that Michael Boddenberg, the minister of finance of the German state of Hesse, once directed a school for butchers and bakers? On the main page on 23 May 2020
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This user has publicly declared that he has a conflict of interest regarding these Wikipedia articles:

Hello! I am Renerpho, or Daniel Bamberger in real life.

While this Wikipedia account was created in 2015, and I have occasionally edited on the German Wikipedia since 2012, I only really began to consider myself a "Wikipedian" in 2018. I never really bothered to create a user page, but the tower of user boxes below characterizes me well enough.

Minor planet names

[edit]

The following minor planet names were suggested by me. I have edited some of the associated articles. Most of these asteroids were discovered by the Catalina Sky Survey (CSS),[a] but I am NOT a member of the CSS staff, nor am I associated with them in any official capacity.[b]

The photo shows myself with Brady Haran and Martyn Poliakoff, in February 2025.

I do have a conflict of interest about Loren C. Ball, who is a friend of mine and the discoverer of 128345 Danielbamberger, which he named after me. I have made a few edits to his article over the years.[c] In the case of Matt Parker and Pi Day,[d] I did not declare that conflict of interest initially, because my involvement had not been revealed at that time. (I had asked to stay anonymous.)

I made one edit to Brady Haran, which is unrelated to the asteroid, and I've similarly made a few edits to Dianna Cowern before the idea to name an asteroid after her came up.[e] I hereby recuse from editing any of these or the other articles below in the future.[f] August von Klipstein [de] is a distant cousin of me, and I own some old documents and memorabilia related to his family.[g] The family connection definitely played a role in my decision to suggest the asteroid name. As of April 2025, he does not have an article on the English Wikipedia, and I won't create one.

List of asteroid names I proposed (that were accepted)
  Near-Earth obj.     MBA (inner)   MBA (outer)   Centaur
  Mars-crosser   MBA (middle)     Jupiter trojan    Trans-Neptunian obj.
  Unclassified
Named Asteroid Provisional Date of naming Naming citation References
16095 Lorenball 1999 TA249 8 November 2019 American amateur astronomer Loren C. Ball (b. 1948) is a prolific discoverer of minor planets. Between 2000 and 2004 he discovered more than 100 asteroids from his Emerald Lane Observatory in Decatur, Alabama. Ball currently promotes asteroid education in schools and on social media. JPL · MPC · Orbit
20610 Franciswilliams 1999 RK235 7 April 2025 Francis Williams (c.1690-c.1770) was a Jamaican astronomer, poet, and polymath. He was one of the most notable free black people in Jamaica. He independently recognized the return of Halley's Comet in 1759. JPL · IAU · IAU · Orbit
21943 Diannacowern 1999 VG114 17 March 2025 Dianna Leilani Cowern (b. 1989) is an American science communicator. On her YouTube channel Physics Girl, she often collaborates with other educational YouTubers. The channel has over 400 million views and more than 3 million subscribers. JPL · IAU · YouTube · Orbit
22955 Tibees 1999 TH251 17 March 2025 Toby Hendy (b. 1995) is a New Zealand science communicator. Better known by her nickname Tibees, her eponymous YouTube channel has gained more than one million subscribers. She publishes videos about mathematics, physics and astronomy. JPL · IAU · YouTube · Orbit
27234 Timdodd 1999 RC2 17 March 2025 Timothy Justin Dodd (b. 1985) is an American science communicator, photographer, and musician. His YouTube channel Everyday Astronaut, where he makes videos about spaceflight, has gained more than one million subscribers. JPL · IAU · Orbit
38048 Blumenbach 1998 UL18 3 February 2025 Ulrich Blumenbach (b. 1964) is a German literary translator. He is best known for his translation of David Foster Wallace's novel Infinite Jest. JPL · IAU · Reddit · Orbit
46925 Bradyharan 1998 SS27 3 February 2025 Brady John Haran (b. 1976) is an Australian-British video journalist and filmmaker. On his YouTube channels, which include Periodic Videos and Numberphile, he frequently collaborates with academics and other educational YouTubers. JPL · IAU · Twitter/X · YouTube · Orbit
53025 Willnoel 1998 WD 17 March 2025 William Gerard Noel (1965-2024) was a British-American medieval manuscript expert, who served as Associate University Librarian for Special Collections at Princeton University. He led the Archimedes Palimpsest Project, which revealed a lost codex of Archimedes. JPL · IAU · Instagram · Orbit
101811 Jakobkaup 1999 JQ6 17 March 2025 Johann Jakob Kaup (1803-1873) was a German paleontologist and zoologist. In 1829, he developed a theory of evolution similar to Darwin's later theory of natural selection. The same year, he discovered the Deinotherium, an extinct genus of elephant-like animals. Kaup first described and named numerous taxa of living and extinct species. JPL · IAU · Orbit
101961 Augustklipstein 1999 RL39 17 March 2025 August Wilhelm von Klipstein (1801-1894) was a German geologist and paleontologist. In 1835, he and his friend Johann Jakob Kaup discovered the first skull of a Deinotherium. JPL · IAU · Orbit
314159 Mattparker 2005 FW1 15 August 2024 Matthew Thomas Parker (b. 1980) is an Australian recreational mathematician, author, and science communicator based in the United Kingdom. His Stand-up Maths YouTube channel has gained more than one million subscribers. Parker's Pi Day (March 14) challenges, where he calculates (by hand) π with the help of volunteers, have popularized mathematics. JPL · IAU · YouTube · Orbit
429733 Gilbertbaker 2011 LX10 17 March 2025 Gilbert Baker (1951-2017) was an American artist, civil rights advocate, and flag designer. In 1978, he created the rainbow flag, which became an internationally-recognized symbol of sexual diversity. JPL · IAU · Reddit · Orbit
628318 Stevemould 2014 TB76 7 April 2025 Steve Mould (b. 1978) is a British educational YouTuber and science presenter with over 3 million subscribers. As part of Festival of the Spoken Nerd, he brings science to live audiences in entertaining ways. His video on self-siphoning beads led to the phenomenon being dubbed the Mould effect. JPL · IAU · Orbit

I am maintaining a list of asteroids discovered by the Catalina Sky Survey that are eligible for naming,[h] which may be used by some of the survey staff themselves.

I have also helped with the naming of certain asteroids. Some of these are listed below.

Guy Wells is a friend, and a colleague of mine at Northolt Branch Observatories.[i] I have no particular connection to the name Taowu, but may edit that article occasionally out of a general interest (rather than a personal one) in the object itself.

  Near-Earth obj.     MBA (inner)   MBA (outer)   Centaur
  Mars-crosser   MBA (middle)     Jupiter trojan    Trans-Neptunian obj.
  Unclassified
Named Asteroid Provisional Date of naming Naming citation References
72834 Guywells 2001 HQ16 31 March 2018 Guy Wells (b. 1976) is a British-Grenadian amateur astronomer and a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society. He has created Northolt Branch Astro, a group of amateur astronomers who seek to increase public interest in astronomy. He provides follow-up observations of Near Earth asteroids to the Minor Planet Center. JPL · MPC · HNA · Orbit
471325 Taowu 2011 KT19 3 February 2025 One of the Four Perils of Chinese mythology, Taowu is a ferocious and stubborn beast said to lurk within the western regions of China. It is depicted as having a human head, tiger legs, boar tusks, and a long tail. JPL · IAU · Orbit

2024 YR4 is an article that I have some interest in, and I have edited that article often.[12] As of March 2025, I am mentioned personally in one section of the article, and I'm not touching that paragraph.[13] Apart from that, I prefer to discuss sources that I am named in on the article talk page before working with them, and to limit the edits I make to the article to uncontroversial facts (or correcting factual errors) where possible. Many of the references that mention my name do so because of the impact risk corridor map that I created and uploaded to Wikimedia Commons, and which is used in the Wikipedia article.

"Can you help me name an asteroid after X?"

[edit]

No. If you want to suggest a name for an asteroid, I am not the right person to contact. Generally, your best bet is to try and contact the discoverer directly. Please make sure first that you understand the rules and guidelines, and are familiar with the general process. Please do not ask them to name an asteroid after yourself (unless, maybe, if you're already good friends with them).

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The exceptions are 72834 Guywells, which was discovered by Loren C. Ball; and 628318 Stevemould, which was discovered by Spacewatch.
  2. ^ For an explanation of what I've got to do with them, best watch David Rankin's interview in Brady Haran's asteroid playlist (time stamp: 7m41s).
  3. ^ My edits to Loren C. Ball: [1] Some of these, like this one about the naming of 62701 Davidrankin, were not without personal connection (David is a friend of mine who now works at CSS). I recused from making edits directly linked to my person, like this one by a different user about the asteroid that Loren had named after myself.
  4. ^ My relevant edits to Matt Parker: [2] -- And to Pi Day: [3]
  5. ^ My edits to Brady Haran: [4] -- And to Dianna Cowern: [5]
  6. ^ Toby Hendy: [6], Tim Dodd: [7], Johann Jakob Kaup: [8], Gilbert Baker (artist): [9], Francis Williams (polymath): [10], Steve Mould: [11]
  7. ^ Like this one, which I deposited at the State Archive in Darmstadt [de] as an extended loan
  8. ^ Catalina and Mount Lemmon - unnamed asteroids (complete up to number 600000)
  9. ^ See Wikipedia:Conflict of interest/Noticeboard#Renerpho for my declaration of the COI that I have in relation to this, and Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Northolt Branch Observatories for the subsequent deletion discussion that ended with no consensus to delete.

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