R. Scott Dunbar

{| class="wikitable floatright" style="font-size: 0.9em;" |+ Minor planets discovered: 10  |- | 3360 Syrinx || 4 November 1981 || |- | 3362 Khufu || 30 August 1984 || |- | 3551 Verenia || 12 September 1983 || |- | 6065 Chesneau || 27 July 1987 || |- | 6435 Daveross || 24 February 1984 || |- | 7163 Barenboim || 24 February 1984 || |- | || 13 June 1983 || |- | || 30 January 1984 || |- | || 25 November 1982 || |- | || 21 October 1981 || |- ! colspan=3 style="font-weight: normal; font-size: smaller; text-align: left; padding: 4px;" |''also see :Category:Discoveries by R. Scott Dunbar'' |- |}

Roy Scott Dunbar is an American astronomer, planetologist and discoverer of comets and minor planets.

Dunbar played an active role in the Palomar Planet-Crossing Asteroid Survey. The Minor Planet Center credits him with the (co-)discovery of 10 numbered minor planets during 1981–1987.

His most notable discoveries include the potentially hazardous object and Aten asteroid 3362 Khufu, which he co-discovered with Maria A. Barucci, as well as the near-Earth object, Mars-crosser and Aten asteroid, 3551 Verenia. Together with Eleanor Helin he co-discovered the minor planets 3360 Syrinx, 6065 Chesneau, 6435 Daveross and 7163 Barenboim.

Dunbar and Helin also claimed the discovery of comet 1980 p, which turned out not to exist. It was a ghost image of Alpha Leonis.

The main-belt asteroid 3718 Dunbar, discovered by Eleanor Helin and Schelte Bus, is named after him. Naming citation was published on 2 April 1988 (). Provided by Wikipedia

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