Jorge wrote:And there's still no Jorge asteroid. Darn!
BTW: I think it should be forbidden to give the same name to asteroids and satellites. Once I tried to go to asteroid Io in Celestia and there was no way, apart from the solar system browser. Following the list (what do you call it? The one you get to by hitting enter) or typing the name got always to the satellite. This could perhaps be considered a bug, since there were two instances of "Io" in the list, and they both leaded to the jovian system...
Yeah, it sounds liek, somehow, there are two entries in your directory for Io. Possibly the result of some sort of add-on that you installed?
As for the asteroid Io, this is one of the main reasons why the IAU has a commission for naming. In fact, I'm surprised that an asteroid *was* named Io, unless it was named before the IAU had such a commission (and being asteroid 85, this is quite likely).
Oh, yeah... and there's no "John" either. You'd think a generic name like that would have made it! On the other hand, there is no "Dollan". I wonder if I could petition to have an asteroid named after my family? Hmmm....
And back to asteroids and the naming commissions: OK, if commission members don't devote all their time to the commissions, then there's no waste. But comparing the number of named asteroids to the number of numbered asteroids one has to get to the conclusion that the system needs updating. It might have worked fine before automatic searches of the sky uncovered thousands and thousands of minor worlds, but since the number of known asteroids exploded it began lagging behind very seriously.
Well, the Naming Commission for Minor Bodies spends all of its time on this; heck, that's why it exists, and why, I presume, people were hired to it. In fact, I'm not even certain if those on the commission would all be astronomers per se. Also, who knows what kind of personnel rotation they have? Maybe they *are* astronomers on there, but their tour of duty as it were is only a limited amount of time.
In the end, I can only say that if serving on this Commission wasted time and kept astronomers from their other, more immediate work, then the odds are there *wouldn't* be such a Commission.
...John...