Provisional designations - Discoveries of station 697

The table contains all provisional designations from the corrected (alls IDs from dbl.txt and ids.txt are used) dataset UNNOBS of the Minor planet Center, for which the station 697 has made the discovery observations itself or has assigned a discovery star. Please be aware, that the designation must not be the discovery due to further identifications.

Created at 04-07-2025 09:05:53.

Nr Designation Short Obs start Obs end Int Discovery Sta Obs Own Sta Opp Stars Reason
1 2011 YP69 K11Y69P 2011 12 30 2024 01 19 4403 2011 12 30 697 29 3 7 2 697 Rule & star
2 2012 BG17 K12B17G 2012 01 15 2024 05 09 4499 2012 01 15 H21 61 3 8 4 697 Star
3 2012 BH17 K12B17H 2012 01 15 2022 12 01 3974 2012 01 15 H21 97 3 8 7 697 Star
4 2014 GK50 K14G50K 1993 04 14 2024 05 01 11340 1993 04 14 697 103 13 7 9 697 F51 Rule & star
Sum           20 years     22    

Discovery counts: 2 'only star' discoveries. 2 'star and rule' discoveries. 2 is the possible sum of discoveries.

Explanations:
Nr: Running number.
Designation: Long designation of the object.
Short: Packed designation of the object.
Obs start: First date for this designation (may be not the first date for object due to prediscovery identifications).
Obs end: Last date for this designation (may be not the last date for object due to later identifications).
Int: Difference between last and first date in days.
Discovery: Date of discovery for this designation.
Sta: Discovery station.
Obs: Number of observations for this object.
Own: Number of own observations for this object.
Sta: Number of stations for this object.
Opp: Number of observed oppositions for this object.
Stars: Stations with discovery stars in all observations of this object. The 'real' discovery station is mostly the first one. Sometimes you must check the details of publication date and the sending date (which you may know, when you sent the data).
Reason: The reason of discovery. Rule is the MPC rule and star means the first asterisk in observations.

This work is made with data from the Minor Planet Center.