Astrônomo

Tomimaru Okuni

1931 - presente

PT.WIKIPEDIA PAGE VIEWS (PV)

Photo of Tomimaru Okuni

Icon of person Tomimaru Okuni

Tomimaru Okuni (大国 富丸, Ookuni Tomimaru) é um astrônomo japonês, descobridor de asteroides, creditado pelo Minor Planet Center com um total de 130 descobertas entre 1995 e 2000. Leia mais na Wikipédia

Sua biografia está disponível em 15 idiomas na Wikipédia. Tomimaru Okuni é o 556º astrônomo mais popular (subiu do 585º em 2024), a 1665ª biografia mais popular do Japão (subiu do 1812ª em 2019) e o 15º astrônomo mais popular do Japão.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Tomimaru Okuni by language

Loading...

Among Astrônomos

Among astrônomos, Tomimaru Okuni ranks 556 out of 644Before him are Roy A. Tucker, Charles W. Juels, Thomas Brisbane, Madge Adam, Irwin I. Shapiro, and Seiji Ueda. After him are Takao Kobayashi, Scott S. Sheppard, Kazimierz Kordylewski, John Dobson, Lawrence H. Aller, and Carlos Torres.

Most Popular Astrônomos in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1931, Tomimaru Okuni ranks 517Before him are Federico Edwards, Gordon Pirie, Billy Bingham, Marc Bouissou, Ann Rule, and Gustav-Adolf Schur. After him are Flora Nwapa, Carlos Graça, Ray Bryant, István Gulyás, Algis Budrys, and Tadeusz Rut.

Others Born in 1931

Go to all Rankings

In Japão

Among people born in Japão, Tomimaru Okuni ranks 1,665 out of NaNBefore him are LiSA (1987), Nikka Costa (1972), Kazumasa Shimizu (1976), Ryota Takahashi (1986), Yoshioka Yayoi (1871), and Minato Yoshida (1992). After him are Yoshiyuki Matsuyama (1966), Futaba Kioka (1965), Takao Kobayashi (1961), Tsuyoshi Nakao (1983), Midori Ito (1969), and Takeshi Watanabe (1972).

Among Astrônomos In Japão

Among astrônomos born in Japão, Tomimaru Okuni ranks 15Before him are Okuro Oikawa (1896), Hiroshi Kaneda (1953), Yuji Hyakutake (1950), Kiichirō Furukawa (1929), Kenzo Suzuki (1950), and Seiji Ueda (1952). After him are Takao Kobayashi (1961), Kazuro Watanabe (1955), Kin Endate (1960), Naoto Satō (1953), Masaru Arai (1952), and Alan Hale (1958).

العربية中文NederlandsEnglishFrançaisDeutschMagyarItaliano日本語PolskiPortuguêsРусскийEspañol