Discovery File:P48 1994 Jean Large.jpg|The 1.2-meter
Samuel Oschin telescope that was used to discover Goibniu on 13 April 2004 Goibniu was discovered on 13 April 2004 by the
Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking (NEAT)
survey, which was a
NASA-directed project for finding
near-Earth asteroids in the sky using telescopes at various observatories across the
United States. The telescope that discovered Goibniu was the
Samuel Oschin telescope at
Palomar Observatory in
San Diego County, California. The people involved in making the discovery observations at Palomar included
Steven Pravdo,
D. MacDonald,
Kenneth Lawrence and
Michael D. Hicks. The discovery of Goibniu was announced by the
Minor Planet Center (MPC) on 14 April 2004, after several other observatories observed the object.
Precovery Precovery observations of Goibniu were first reported by astronomer
Reiner Stoss and published by the MPC on 10 June 2004. These precovery observations, which came from
Digitized Sky Survey images from 1993–1997, allowed for an accurate
determination of Goibniu's orbit without the need for follow-up observations. Even earlier precovery observations have since been reported, from dates as early as December 1954.
Number and name Number This object has the
minor planet provisional designation , which was given by the MPC in the discovery announcement. The provisional designation indicates the year and half-month of the object's discovery date. received its permanent
minor planet catalog number of 90568 from the MPC on 30 August 2004.
Name Until 2025, did not have a proper name and the discoverers' privilege for naming this object expired ten years after it was numbered. According to naming guidelines by the
International Astronomical Union's
Working Group for Small Bodies Nomenclature, was open for name suggestions that relate to creation myths, as recommended for Kuiper belt objects in general. On 1 September 2025, it was officially named
Goibniu, after the Irish god of metallurgy and hospitality. == Orbit ==