I am pleased to learn that the late actor Leonard Nimoy has been given a singular honor: the asteroid 4864 Nimoy has been named after him.Rico says the guy did great work, within the limitations of the character...
The asteroid is very roughly ten kilometers across, and is in the main belt between Mars and Jupiter. It orbits the Sun once every four years.
Its orbit is very slightly elliptical (though Spock would, no doubt, inform you that it has an eccentricity of 0.1778108147152254, with a 1-sigma uncertainty of 6.3351e-08), and orbits the Sun in almost the same plane as Earth. It was originally discovered in 1988. In the orbital diagram above, I displayed the position of 4864 Nimoy on the date of his death, 27 February 2015.
In the announcement, a brief statement was made:Discovered 2 September 1988 by H. Debehogne at the European Southern Observatory.Very nice. Amusingly, on Twitter, Matthew Ring noted this:
Leonard Nimoy (1931-2015) was an American actor, film director, and poet., best known for his portrayal of the half-Vulcan/half-human science officer Spock in the original "Star Trek" television series and subsequent movies, Nimoy wrote two autobiographies: I Am Not Spock (1975) and I Am Spock (1995).
Ironically, it may not be as dry as all that. At that location in the asteroid belt, there’s some chance of ice inside Nimoy.
And another layer of irony: some people may think that Vulcans were incapable of emotion, but, in fact, they felt emotions even more strongly than humans; they just kept them more tightly under control. It wasn’t ice under Spock’s skin, it was barely constrained lava.
And I have to wonder. Sometime between now and the 23rd century, will we have visited this mountain-sized rock? And in that (hopefully promising) future, will Star Trek still be the inspiration it is for so many today? I hope so. May its, and Nimoy’s, legacy live long and prosper.
08 June 2015
Asteroid 4864 Nimoy
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