O'Neill, Ian (9 de noviembre de 2008). «Strangest Kuiper Belt Objects: The Top Five»(html). Astroengine(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 20 de julio de 2012. Consultado el 26 de marzo de 2018. «2008 KV42 has been nicknamed Drac for a very good reason. In the story of Dracula, the mythical vampire is known for his ability to walk on walls and 2008 KV42 is doing a similar thing. This strange KBO has an inclination of more than 90° from the ecliptic, meaning that when compared with all the planets and other KBOs, Drac appears to orbit the Sun in a retrograde motion (i.e. the wrong way).»
O'Neill, Ian (5 de septiembre de 2008). «Kuiper Belt Object Travelling the Wrong-Way in a One-Way Solar System»(html). Universe Today (en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 22 de abril de 2012. Consultado el 26 de marzo de 2018. «The object, designated as 2008 KV42 but nicknamed Drac (after Dracula, as vampires are fabled to have the ability to walk on walls), has a highly inclined orbit of 103.5°.»
O'Neill, Ian (9 de noviembre de 2008). «Strangest Kuiper Belt Objects: The Top Five»(html). Astroengine(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 20 de julio de 2012. Consultado el 26 de marzo de 2018. «2008 KV42 has been nicknamed Drac for a very good reason. In the story of Dracula, the mythical vampire is known for his ability to walk on walls and 2008 KV42 is doing a similar thing. This strange KBO has an inclination of more than 90° from the ecliptic, meaning that when compared with all the planets and other KBOs, Drac appears to orbit the Sun in a retrograde motion (i.e. the wrong way).»
O'Neill, Ian (5 de septiembre de 2008). «Kuiper Belt Object Travelling the Wrong-Way in a One-Way Solar System»(html). Universe Today (en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 22 de abril de 2012. Consultado el 26 de marzo de 2018. «The object, designated as 2008 KV42 but nicknamed Drac (after Dracula, as vampires are fabled to have the ability to walk on walls), has a highly inclined orbit of 103.5°.»