{| class="wikitable floatright" style="font-size: 0.9em; width: 270px;"
|+ Minor planets discovered: 22,077 were used for this conversion until 2007. Then the Sloan Digital Sky Survey catalog was used, along with supplemental information from the Carlsberg Catalog and the 2MASS catalog. Asteroid brightness was converted to standard visual magnitude. These data, along with the time of the observations, were sent to the Minor Planet Center (MPC) from which they were distributed to the scientific community. Potential near-Earth objects were handled expeditiously so that other observers could locate the asteroid on the same night and make further observations.
Telescope operation was automated to the extent that the survey could be run all night without observer intervention. However, the telescope was seldom operated in the automatic mode because an observer was required to reduce data promptly and to correct any malfunctions that might have occurred.
Discoveries
thumb|265px|Number of [[near-Earth object|NEOs detected by various surveys:
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As of 2017, LONEOS is credited by the Minor Planet Center with the discovery of 22,077 minor planets between 1998 and 2008. The discoveries include main-belt asteroids, near-Earth Objects (NEO) and Mars-crossers.
NEO-discovery statistics
The table below lists the number of discoveries made by LONEOS each year of operation. Asteroids thought to be larger than one kilometer in diameter were used as benchmarks in assessing survey completeness. Hence, some table elements have two numbers separated by a slash. The second number represents the number of discoveries larger than one kilometer. The column labeled "Asteroid Observations" is the number of observations sent to the Minor Planet Center. Each asteroid was typically observed four times (once per frame) each night.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: right; font-size: 0.9em; margin-left: 10px;"
|-
! width=50 | Year
! Asteroid Observations
! width=50 | NEAs
! width=45 | PHAs
! width=50 | Atens
! width=50 | Apollos
! width=50 | Amors
! Comets
|-
! 1998
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 122,550
| 7/4
| 0
| 0/0
| 3/2
| 4/2
| align=center | 1
|-
! 1999
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 128,220
| 14/7
| 5
| 2/2
| 6/3
| 6/2
| align=center | 6
|-
! 2000
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 271,237
| 38/10
| 4
| 3/0
| 18/5
| 17/5
| align=center | 6
|-
! 2001
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 626,976
| 42/11
| 9
| 4/0
| 17/4
| 21/7
| align=center | 7
|-
! 2002
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 407,064
| 21/4
| 3
| 3/1
| 9/0
| 9/3
| align=center | 3
|-
! 2003
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 720,528
| 54/10
| 17
| 5/1
| 26/3
| 23/6
| align=center | 2
|-
! 2004
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 716,152
| 39/4
| 9
| 5/0
| 22/4
| 12/0
| align=center | 4
|-
! 2005
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 820,609
| 42/4
| 8
| 6/0
| 15/1
| 21/3
| align=center | 8
|-
! 2006
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 679,927
| 19/1
| 2
| 0/0
| 11/1
| 8/0
| align=center | 2
|-
! 2007
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 630,469
| 12/0
| 2
| 2/0
| 4/0
| 6/0
| align=center | 3
|-
! 2008
| style="padding-right: 50px;" | 88,953
| 1/0
| 0
| 0/0
| 1/0
| 0/0
| align=center | 0
|-
! Total
! 5,212,685
! 289/55
! 59
! 30/4
! 131/23
! 127/28
! align=center | 42
|-
|}
A complete list of LONEOS NEO observations can be found at the NeoDys web site.
Other science
The LONEOS frame archive provides a data set with wide spatial and temporal sky coverage. Other investigators have used these characteristics to produce the following research papers and presentations.
- Investigating the Distinct Components of the Galactic Stellar Halo RR Lyrae from the LONEOS-I Survey, American Astronomical Society, AAS Meeting #211, #163.02, Huber, Mark; Miceli, A.; Cook, K. H.; Rest, A.; Narayan, G.; Stubbs, C. W.
- Evidence for Distinct Components of the Galactic Stellar Halo from 838 RR Lyrae Stars Discovered in the LONEOS-I Survey, eprint arXiv:0706.1583,Miceli, A.; Rest, A.; Stubbs, C. W.; Hawley, S. L.; Cook, K. H.; Magnier, J.Johal, E. A.; Krisciunas, K.; Bowell, E.; Koehn, B.
- Detecting variable objects with the LONEOS photometric database: 15000 square degrees of variability measurements down to 19th magnitude in R, American Astronomical Society, 199th AAS Meeting, #101.10; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 33, p. 1463, Rest, A.; Miceli, A.; Miknaitis, G.; Covarrubias, R.; Stubbs, C.; Magnier, E.; Koehn, B.; Bowell, T.; Cook, K.; Krisciunas, K.
Highlights
- 1999 April 12, Shawn Hermann discovers an Aten, 1999 HF1, more than three kilometers in diameter.
- 1999 May, the 1999 JD6 peanut-shaped asteroid (a contact binary) was first discovered.
- 1999 December 2, Bruce Koehn discovers the first Earth-crossing Damocloid asteroid, 1999 XS35, (later identified as a comet).
- 2001 August 14, Mike Van Ness discovers the second Earth-crossing Damocloid, C/2001 OG108 (LONEOS).
- 2001 November 20, discovers Near-Earth object that will pass from the Earth on 2028 June 26.
- 2003 October 15, Brian A. Skiff recovers 1937 UB (Hermes), a lost asteroid for 66 years.
- 2004 May 20, Brian Skiff finds an asteroid, , with the (then) smallest orbit. It is the second asteroid found that has an orbit entirely within Earth's orbit.
LONEOS staff
Lowell staff:
- Principal investigator: Dr. Edward Bowell
- Computer programming: Dr. Bruce Koehn
- Professional observers: Brian Skiff, Bill Ferris, Mike Van Ness, Shawn Hermann, Jason Sanborn
- Volunteer observers: Christopher Onken, Jennifer Palguta, Wendy Kelly, Thomas Grimstad, Lori Levy, Robert Cash, Bliss Bliss, James Ashley
Collaborators:
- CCD performance modeling: Dr. Steve Howell, WIYN/NOAO:
- Asteroid detection modeling: Dr. Karri Muinonen, University of Helsinki
See also
- Pan-STARRS
- Planetary Data System (PDS)
- Spaceguard
References
</references> <!-- end of reflist -->
External links
- LONEOS
- Planetary Data System (PDS)
