4645 Tentaikojo | 16 September 1990 | |
4676 Uedaseiji | 16 September 1990 | |
4714 Toyohiro | 29 September 1989 | |
4718 Araki | 13 November 1990 | |
4743 Kikuchi | 16 February 1988 | |
4750 Mukai | 15 December 1990 | |
4971 Hoshinohiroba | 30 January 1989 | |
4975 Dohmoto | 16 September 1990 | |
5180 Ohno | 6 April 1989 | |
5192 Yabuki | 4 February 1991 | |
5357 Sekiguchi | 2 March 1992 | |
5474 Gingasen | 3 December 1988 | |
6246 Komurotoru | 13 November 1990 | |
6381 Toyama | 21 February 1988 | |
7418 Akasegawa | 11 March 1991 | |
9602 Oya | 31 October 1991 | |
9871 Jeon | 28 February 1992 | |
16439 Yamehoshinokawa | 30 January 1989 | |
16449 Kigoyama | 29 September 1989 | |
21015 Shigenari | 16 October 1988 | |
(29159) 1989 GB | 2 April 1989 | |
(37565) 1988 VL3 | 3 November 1988 | |
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Tetsuya Fujii (藤井哲也,Fujii Tetsuya; born 1960) is a Japaneseamateur astronomer and prolific discoverer of minor planets.[2]
From 1988 to 1992, he had discovered a total of 22 numbered asteroids together with his colleague,Kazuro Watanabe, at theKitami Observatory in the Kitami-Abashiri Region Cultural Centre in easternHokkaidō, Japan, where several amateur astronomers have been conducting an active program ofastrometric observations of minor planets and comets.[1][3] He is director of the astronomical club in Kitami, where he also works for the NHK broadcasting office.[2]
The minor planet4343 Tetsuya, discovered bySeiji Ueda andHiroshi Kaneda in 1988, was named in his honour.[2]