![]() |
Members of the Pauma band pose inside the dome of the 200-inch Hale Telescope. Credit: Palomar Observatory/Caltech |
On June 7, at Caltech's Palomar Observatory in the forested mountain outside San Diego, members of the Pauma band of indigenous peoples gathered to celebrate the naming of the first known asteroid to circle entirely within the orbit of Venus. The asteroid was originally discovered in 2020 by the Zwicky Transient Facility, or ZTF, which operates at the Palomar Observatory. Sometime after its discovery, the ZTF team decided to ask the Pauma band, whose ancestral lands include the mountainous region where the observatory is located, if they would like to bestow the new cosmic find with a name of their choosing.
Ultimately, the indigenous group chose to name the asteroid 'Ayló'chaxnim, which means "Venus girl" in their native language of Luiseño.
The Palomar naming ceremony included blessings, traditional Pauma songs, and a reading of a poem titled Luiseño Songs of the Seasons, which describes how "it will soon be time for the acorns to fall from the trees" when "Venus is rising."