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Asteroids Named In Honor Of Mars Pathfinder Leaders



MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov

Contact: Diane Ainsworth

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE						June 10, 1998

PATHFINDER LEADERS TAKE THEIR PLACE AMONG THE STARS 

	Four asteroids have been named in honor of key team members of the Mars
Pathfinder mission that landed on the red planet a year ago on July 4.  The
new asteroid names were announced by asteroid hunter Eleanor Helin of
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA.

	Mars Pathfinder team members Dr. Matthew Golombek, Brian Muirhead,
Donna Shirley and Tony Spear were awarded their very own "stars" in the sky
by Helin, an astronomer who has dedicated her career to the discovery and
tracking of near-Earth asteroids.  The recipients received honorary plaques
in a ceremony hosted by JPL Director Dr. Edward Stone.

	"After exploring and studying an incredible number of Mars rocks and
naming them, we felt it appropriate to name some neighboring Mars rocks for
these four Pathfinder Mars-keteers," Helin said.

	Asteroid Donna Shirley, dubbed 5649 Shirley, which was discovered Nov.
18, 1990 at Palomar Observatory near San Diego, CA.  The rock, measuring
about  6 to 13 kilometers (3 to 8 miles) in diameter, crosses the orbit of
Mars in its orbit inclined 21.7 degrees to the ecliptic plane on which the
planets orbit the Sun.  It was named in Shirley's honor for her efforts in
designing the first roving vehicle on another planet, Helin said.  The
asteroid is currently setting in the west at about magnitude 17.5.

	Asteroid Tony Spear is a fast-moving body, about 5 to 12 kilometers (3
to 7 miles) in diameter, or roughly the same size as the Chixculub asteroid
which is believed to have plummeted to Earth and wiped out the dinosaurs 65
million years ago.  In a highly inclined orbit of 21.2 degrees to the
ecliptic plane, Spear's namesake asteroid "gives us good reason to pray
that it doesn't come too close to Earth in the near future," Helin said.

	Golombek's stellar keepsake, 6456 Golombek, is 2 to 4 kilometers (1 to
2.5 miles) in diameter, traveling in a 3.2-year orbit around the Sun.  With
a brightness at a current magnitude of 15.9, this chunk of rock is one of
the larger near-Earth asteroids in the list of known Earth- approaching
bodies.  Its closest approach is well inside the orbit of Mars. 
Eventually, it could possibly cross the path of Earth's orbit.

	Asteroid Muirhead is another Mars-crossing asteroid, a mountain-sized, 
5- to 9- kilometer-diameter (about 3- to 6-mile) body that travels in a
highly inclined, eccentric orbit.

	JPL's asteroid tracking project, known as the Near-Earth Asteroid
Tracking (NEAT) system, has stepped up work in the field of near-Earth
object detection and cataloging with additional funding from its NASA
sponsor within the Office of Space Science in Washington, DC.

	With a powerful new real-time analysis system, development of two new
charge-coupled device (CCD) cameras and longer observational runs each
month, NEAT will be able to double the amount of nightly sky coverage and
number of discoveries in the near future.

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