Tetsuya Fujii

{| class="wikitable floatright" style="font-size: 0.9em;" |+ Minor planets discovered: 22  |- | 4645 Tentaikojo || 16 September 1990 |- | 4676 Uedaseiji || 16 September 1990 |- | 4714 Toyohiro || 29 September 1989 |- | 4718 Araki || 13 November 1990 |- | 4743 Kikuchi || 16 February 1988 |- | 4750 Mukai || 15 December 1990 |- | 4971 Hoshinohiroba || 30 January 1989 |- | 4975 Dohmoto || 16 September 1990 |- | 5180 Ohno || 6 April 1989 |- | 5192 Yabuki || 4 February 1991 |- | 5357 Sekiguchi || 2 March 1992 |- | 5474 Gingasen || 3 December 1988 |- | 6246 Komurotoru || 13 November 1990 |- | 6381 Toyama || 21 February 1988 |- | 7418 Akasegawa || 11 March 1991 |- | 9602 Oya || 31 October 1991 |- | 9871 Jeon || 28 February 1992 |- | 16439 Yamehoshinokawa || 30 January 1989 |- | 16449 Kigoyama || 29 September 1989 |- | 21015 Shigenari || 16 October 1988 |- | || 2 April 1989 |- | || 3 November 1988 |- | colspan=3 style="font-size: smaller;" | * all were co-discovered with Kazuro Watanabe |}

Tetsuya Fujii (, ''Fujii Tetsuya''; born 1960) is a Japanese amateur astronomer and prolific discoverer of minor planets.

From 1988 to 1992, he had discovered a total of 22 numbered asteroids together with his colleague, Kazuro Watanabe, at the Kitami Observatory in the Kitami-Abashiri Region Cultural Centre in eastern Hokkaidō, Japan, where several amateur astronomers have been conducting an active program of astrometric observations of minor planets and comets. He is director of the astronomical club in Kitami, where he also works for the NHK broadcasting office.

The minor planet 4343 Tetsuya, discovered by Seiji Ueda and Hiroshi Kaneda in 1988, was named in his honour. Provided by Wikipedia

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