Anders Ynnerman is professor of scientific visualisation, director of Visualization Center C in Norrköping and one of the pioneers of visualisation research. He leads OpenSpace, an international research project whose software brings together information on planetary orbits and space weather, satellite imagery, data from robotic missions to other planets and much more.
Into space in the dome theatre
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Anders Ynnerman feels deeply honoured and proud to have an asteroid named after him.
“Tremendous fun! Space has been an interest since childhood. I watched the Moon landing when I was six years old and I was fascinated,” he says.
Why do you think the asteroid was named after you?
“In my role as professor, my lifelong interest in astronomy and space has been part of building up Visualization Center C and the research at Campus Norrköping. I suppose that my role as an ambassador for space, and my interest in communicating with the public and new generations, are the reasons I’ve now had a celestial body named after me – Ynnerman 15313.”
The asteroids named after Swedes who have made contributions in space-related fields were discovered in the early 1990s. They form part of the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, which consists of millions of these small celestial bodies.
Newly discovered asteroids are initially given provisional designations and may later be given official names once their orbits around the Sun have been determined. In February this year, the International Astronomical Union announced that several objects had been given new names.
Honorary doctors among those with asteroids named after them
Among the ten Swedes with asteroids named after them are two honorary doctors of Linköping University. One of them is astronaut Marcus Wandt, who became the third Swede in space when he travelled to the International Space Station (ISS). The other is the astronomer Marie Rådbo, professor emerita at the University of Gothenburg and well known for her public engagement in astronomy.
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Translation: Simon Phillips