Suzanne Tourtellotte | |
Birth Date: | 11 January 1945 |
Nationality: | American |
Fields: | Planetary astronomy |
Education: | MIT, Yale University Princeton University |
Known For: | co-discovery of 15 numbered minor planets, among them |
Suzanne W. Tourtellotte (January 11, 1945 - June 20, 2013) was an American astronomer and discoverer of minor planets, a researcher at Yale University in the United States.
Tourtellotte graduated from MIT in 1966, and received an M.S. degree from Yale University in 1967. She continued to study for a Ph.D. in biochemistry from Princeton University in 1971.[1]
From 1998, Tourtellote was the data manager at the Yale University department of astronomy for the YALO and SMARTS consortium. She worked with Brad Schaefer on photometry of the moon Nereid.[2] In 2003 together with David L. Rabinowitz, Brad and Martha Schaefer she studied the solar phase curves and rotation states of Kuiper belt objects. In 2013; she worked on the La Silla Observatory Quest KBO survey [3]
Tourtellote was faculty member at Albertus Magnus College until 2008. She was a research scientist at the department of astronomy at Yale.[1]
She died at the age of 68 in Hamden, Connecticut.
Tourtellotte is credited by the Minor Planet Center with the co-discovery of 15 numbered minor planets made at the Chilean La Silla Observatory in 2010, in collaboration with astronomers David L. Rabinowitz and Megan E. Schwamb. Most notably are and, a Neptune trojan and a trans-Neptunian object, respectively.
9 March 2010 | |||
7 March 2010 | |||
9 September 2010 | |||
11 November 2010 | |||
9 March 2010 | |||
13 March 2010 | |||
17 March 2010 | |||
18 March 2010 | |||
19 March 2010 | |||
19 March 2010 | |||
14 April 2010 | |||
12 May 2010 | |||
14 August 2010 | |||
3 November 2010 | |||
14 August 2010 |