August 16, 2008
Limb Magic
image by Harald Paleske, Langendorf, Germany
Beyond Bailly, almost (85° W longitude) on the mean limb, is a large crater that is infrequently seen. With a diameter of 149 (or 163 km according to IAU and Rükl, respectively), Drygalski is ~50% larger than Copernicus. The only nearside craters with a relatively fresh classical Copernican look that are bigger are nearby Hausen (167 km) and distant Humboldt (207 km) and Petavius (177 km). Why are these big craters near the limb? Harald's large scale image of Drygalski shows the smooth floor, and hints at the rougher floor behind the central peak. A terrace is visible on the left wall but the right wall seems more disorganized, probably because of the larger number of craters that cut that side, visible both here and in the Lunar Orbiter IV view.
Chuck Wood
Technical Details
2008-07-26, 4:42 UT. 408mm Newton f 8, 5 m, DMK 1/30sec. exposure, red filter, stack of 300 frames, 3 picture mosaic; seeing good (7/10)
Related Links
Rükl plates 72 & VI
Harald's excellent Solar (with Moon coming) website
Yesterday's LPOD: Full Moon Secrets
Tomorrow's LPOD: Just an Eclipse
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