On September 1, 2025, the scattered disc object (145451) 2005 RM43 was officially named (145451) Rumnina.
"Rumina is a minor Roman goddess who was invoked as a protector of nursing mothers." (WGSBN Bull. 5, #20, 7) 
Rumina was a deity who protected breastfeeding, both in humans and animals.
On the banks of the Tiber River, a she-wolf (Lupa) found a beached basket containing the twin babies Romulus and Remus. The she-wolf nursed and cared for them until they were discovered by a shepherd (Faustulus), who raised them as his own sons. 
In the place where the basket was found, a wild fig tree grew, considered sacred to the goddess Rumina, which symbolized the ability to give and sustain life.
 
The most striking feature of this mythology is that the capacity for nursing and care occurs between different species, which aligns with the ability of scattered disc objects with a very high aphelion to understand and interact with different cultures and societies.
The discovery of the object Rumina coincided with the Prüm Convention, a treaty signed in May 2005 by Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Spain in the city of Prüm, Germany, which was later joined by other members of the European Union. This treaty outlined the police cooperation measures adopted, such as the exchange of data related to DNA, fingerprints, and vehicle registrations.
The prediscoveries of the object Rumina [photographs taken before its discovery], coincide with progress in this area. For example, Europol officially began its operations in July 1999.
The first prediscovery of the object Rumnia, wich dates back to November 1976, coincides with the beginning of police cooperation between the member states of the European Community through the 'Trevi Group' network, comprised of representatives from the Ministries of Justice and Interior.

