The Lincoln Laboratory Near-Earth Asteroid Research Team at Socorro, New Mexico is credited with discovering the asteroid, Biyo, on May 22, 1998.
The asteroid was named after the teacher, Dr. Josette Biyo.
Biyo is an asteroid that was once thought to be a planet. It was named after the public school teacher Dr. Josette Biyo.
The temperature on 13241 Biyo, which is an asteroid, is a few tens of degrees Kelvin.
Biyo is an asteroid in the asteroid belt a few km across that was named after a teacher. Its too small to be considered a planet or even a dwarf planet. Its not spherical and it does not dominate its orbit.
No, I can't. Firstly, there is no "planet Biyo." There's an asteroid named Biyo, and the person it's named after apparently has referred to it as "planet Biyo", but it's definitely not a planet except in the sense that any body orbiting a star instead of directly orbiting a non-stellar body is a minor planet. Secondly, as far as I'm aware there are no "pictures" of 13241 Biyo that show any more details than a tiny pinpoint of light. So just take any picture of stars, pick out some particularly dim one, and call it "Biyo". Who's going to know?
Dr. Josette Biyo didn't discover it, it was named in her honour.
Biyo is an asteroid in the asteroid belt a few km across. It was named after a teacher.
It is real, but it is an asteroid, not a planet.
No. "Planet" Biyo is not a planet but an asteroid.
No. Biyo is an asteroid, not a planet.
Biyo is an asteroid that was once thought to be a planet. It was named after the public school teacher Dr. Josette Biyo.
The temperature on 13241 Biyo, which is an asteroid, is a few tens of degrees Kelvin.
May 22, 1998. Biyo is not really a planet, its an asteroid in the asteroid belt a few km across. It was named after a teacher.
Josette Biyo did not discover an asteroid. She had an asteroid named in her honor. It was MIT that named a minor planet/asteroid after Biyo since she won the 2002 Intel Excellence in Teaching award. Only a handful of research astronomers are involved in actually discovering asteroids. Many famous people have had asteroids named after them.
You might be thinking of Biyo. Biyo is not really a planet, its an asteroid in the asteroid belt a few km across. It was named after a teacher.
13241 Biyo (1998 KM41) is an asteroid named after Filipino teacher Dr. Josette Biyo,[1] a high school teacher cited for winning the 2002 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in Louisville, Kentucky. She was the first Asian teacher to win the Intel Excellence in Teaching Award.
Yes. Biyo is an asteroid orbiting in the main belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
No. Nothing is replacing Pluto. Nibiru is not a real object but a hoax. Biyo is not a planet but an asteroid.