Yoshiaki Oshima


see

Yoshiaki Oshima 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 1988 XB and the Jupiter trojan.

International asteroid monitoring project

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.
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 program which had involved 12 teams of junior high to senior high school classes from Asian and European countries.
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.

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.

List of discovered minor planets

In 1988, Oshima discovered 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, 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 '.
3843 OISCA28 February 1987
4157 Izu11 December 1988
4261 Gekko28 January 1989
4293 Masumi1 November 1989
4383 Suruga1 December 1989
4403 Kuniharu2 March 1987
'''9 October 1989
4840 Otaynang23 October 1989
28 January 1989
5206 Kodomonomori7 March 1988
1 January 1989
5282 Yamatotakeru2 November 1988
20 December 1989
5397 Vojislava14 November 1988
5730 Yonosuke13 October 1988
5740 Toutoumi29 November 1989
10 March 1988
2 December 1989
4 November 1989
28 January 1989
5 December 1988
10 October 1988
15 December 1988
19 February 1988
27 November 1989

20 November 1989
5 February 1989
20 November 1989
15 October 1988
10 February 1989
21 November 1989
25 October 1989
23 October 1989
25 October 1989
25 October 1989
29 October 1989

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