Among his most notable discoveries are the two
near-Earth objects (NEOs)
1862 Apollo, the namesake of the Apollo group which became the largest group of asteroids within the NEO category with nearly 8,000 members, and
69230 Hermes, famous for being a
lost asteroid for more than half a century until its recovery in 2003, and for being the only unnumbered but named asteroid during that period. He also discovered several large
Jupiter trojans including
911 Agamemnon,
1143 Odysseus,
1172 Äneas,
1173 Anchises,
1208 Troilus,
1404 Ajax,
1437 Diomedes and
1749 Telamon. The main-belt asteroid
5535 Annefrank, which he discovered in 1942 during World War II, was later visited by the
Stardust spacecraft in 2002. His lowest numbered minor planet discovery is
796 Sarita, an
asteroid from the middle region of the main-belt. Reinmuth also discovered two
periodic comets of the
Jupiter family, namely
30P/Reinmuth and
44P/Reinmuth.
Meta-naming The initials of the minor planets through , all discovered by Reinmuth, spell out "G. Stracke".
Gustav Stracke was a German astronomer and orbit computer, who had asked that no planet be named after him. In this manner Reinmuth was able to honour the man whilst also honouring his wish: •
1227 Geranium •
1228 Scabiosa •
1229 Tilia •
1230 Riceia •
1231 Auricula •
1232 Cortusa •
1233 Kobresia •
1234 Elyna Later
1019 Strackea, also discovered by Reinmuth, was named after Stracke.
List of discovered minor planets Karl Reinmuth is credited by the
Minor Planet Center with the discovery of 395
minor planets made during 1914–1957, with an interruption from April 1943 to July 1949 due to the end and the aftermath of
WWII. == Works ==