| 3860 Plovdiv | 8 August 1986 | [1]MPC |
| 4102 Gergana | 15 October 1988 | MPC |
| 4893 Seitter | 9 August 1986 | [1]MPC |
| 5950 Leukippos | 9 August 1986 | [1]MPC |
| 7079 Baghdad | 5 September 1986 | [1]MPC |
| 9732 Juchnovski | 24 September 1984 | [2]MPC |
| 9936 Al-Biruni | 8 August 1986 | [1]MPC |
| 11852 Shoumen | 10 September 1988 | [2]MPC |
| 11856 Nicolabonev | 11 September 1988 | [2]MPC |
| 12246 Pliska | 11 September 1988 | MPC |
| 13930 Tashko | 12 September 1988 | MPC |
| 13498 Al Chwarizmi | 6 August 1986 | [1]MPC |
| 14342 Iglika | 23 September 1984 | [1]MPC |
| 22283 Pytheas | 6 August 1986 | [1]MPC |
| ||
Violeta Ivanova (Bulgarian: Виолета Иванова) is a Bulgarianastronomer.[2]
She is credited by theMinor Planet Center with the discovery of 14asteroids between 1984 and 1988.[1] She works at the Institute of Astronomy, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences[3] and has made her discoveries at the Smolyan Observatory, which became theRozhen National Observatory (at the Mount of Rozhen in theRhodopes) some time after 2002. The Koronian asteroid4365 Ivanova was named after her on 25 August 1991 (M.P.C. 18645).[2][4]
She sometimes signsVioleta G. Ivanova. She should not be confused withV. V. Ivanova (who also signsV. F. Ivanova), now of the Institute of Physics,University of St. Petersburg, St. Petergof,Russia, previously with theInstitut Geokhimii i Analiticheskoi Khimii (Vernadskii Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry),Moscow.
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