ASTRONOMER

Kenzo Suzuki

1950 - Today

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Kenzo Suzuki (鈴木 憲蔵, Suzuki Kenzō, b. 1950) is a Japanese astronomer from Toyota, Aichi, Japan. Between 1984 and 1992, he has discovered 42 minor planets mostly in collaboration with astronomers Takeshi Urata and Toshimasa Furuta. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Kenzo Suzuki is the 535th most popular astronomer (up from 576th in 2019), the 1,534th most popular biography from Japan (up from 1,767th in 2019) and the 13th most popular Japanese Astronomer.

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Among ASTRONOMERS

Among astronomers, Kenzo Suzuki ranks 535 out of 644Before him are Kiichirō Furukawa, Anne Sewell Young, György Kulin, David Todd Wilkinson, Ewine van Dishoeck, and Frank Shu. After him are Gavriil Adrianovich Tikhov, Benjamin Banneker, John Huchra, John Stanley Plaskett, Ernest Esclangon, and María Teresa Ruiz.

Most Popular Astronomers in Wikipedia

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1950, Kenzo Suzuki ranks 478Before him are Gil, Paola del Medico, Carlos Roberto Flores, Bernard Le Coq, Zdravka Yordanova, and Ofelia Medina. After him are Tadeusz Ślusarski, Alan Sorrenti, Evgeny Sveshnikov, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Theo Custers, and Joseph Paul Franklin.

Others Born in 1950

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In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Kenzo Suzuki ranks 1,534 out of 6,245Before him are Nobuyuki Aihara (1934), Kotono Mitsuishi (1967), Hideki Kamiya (1970), Aya Kitō (1962), Yoshimasa Hayashi (1961), and Yōichi Masuzoe (1948). After him are Mayumi Omatsu (1970), Junji Goto (1971), Akira Kubota (1973), Hidetoyo Watanabe (1971), Kazuya Nakai (1967), and Hitoshi Matsumoto (1963).

Among ASTRONOMERS In Japan

Among astronomers born in Japan, Kenzo Suzuki ranks 13Before him are Minoru Honda (1913), Kaoru Ikeya (1943), Okuro Oikawa (1896), Hiroshi Kaneda (1953), Yuji Hyakutake (1950), and Kiichirō Furukawa (1929). After him are Seiji Ueda (1952), Tomimaru Okuni (1931), Takao Kobayashi (1961), Kazuro Watanabe (1955), Kin Endate (1960), and Naoto Satō (1953).