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Revision as of 02:05, 25 February 2018
What's in a Name?
Originally published September 23, 2008
image by Pete Lawrence; south up
The south polar region is the most dramatic place to observe on the Moon. There are always shadows nearby, highlighting deep craters and tall mountains. As I marveled at Pete's recent view I noticed the triple or quadruple crater cluster near the center front that includes Newton. It is amazing that such a towering figure of science and astronomy would have received such a hard to see crater. Was the name given by an angry rival or someone who disbelieved in universal gravitation or an ex-student who failed calculus? The way to tell is to check Newton in The Moon Wiki. The name was given by Schröter to a ghost crater south of Plato, but was moved by the great 19th century selenographer Mädler to its present polar wilderness. I am surpized that Schröter and Mädler couldn't find a better feature to memorialize perhaps the greatest scientist ever. Was it because he was English and they were German (there was a lot of rivalry then)? That seems too petty, but between them Schröter and Mädler gave hundreds of new names - surely they could have done better for Isaac Newton?
Chuck Wood
Technical Details
see image
Related Links
Rükl plate 73
Yesterday's LPOD: A Celestron Orange Moon
Tomorrow's LPOD: Edging Along the Limb
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