You must have seen 1989 UP. I think it's the only NEA that I discovered (or had a hand in discovering) that actually has my name on the discovery credit. The rest are credited to Spacewatch (though I've probably found nearly 1/3 of all the Spacewatch NEA discoveries over the years). My most famous discovery was 1997 XF11 (that was an object which for about 1 day back in March 1998 made the news when someone suggested a high impact probability for the object in October 2028 that evaporated after further analysis and when some prediscovery images from 8 years earlier were identified so that the orbit was improved) and my discovery of 1994 XM1 put me in the Guinness Book of World Records since it was, until last month, the closest observed approach of an asteroid outside the atmosphere at a distanceof only 105,000 kilometers (just over 1/4 the distance to the Moon). You should have seen the look on my niece's face when she disbelievingly found my name in the Guinness book of all places. :-) Jim. On Tue, 28 Oct 2003, Trisha wrote: > Hi Jim, again,.,.. > You are right, that space weather site is pretty cool, I did manage to > find you (Spacewatch) in the NEA section, I even found one with your > name on it from 1989. Not that I have any idea what I am looking at, > but it is interesting! > Trisha > > Jim Scotti Lunar & Planetary Laboratory University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721 USA http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~jscotti/