Difference between revisions of "September 21, 2014"

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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[September 22, 2014|T-Rex Smile]] </p>
 
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[September 22, 2014|T-Rex Smile]] </p>
 
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Revision as of 17:46, 7 February 2015

A Crater Without an Owner

LPOD-sep21-14.jpg
image by Ricardo Jose Vaz Tolentino, Brasil

Ching-Te is a tiny impact crater of simple morphology, which is located west of the famous Taurus Littrow Valley, which was the landing site of the last mission of the Apollo program (Apollo 17). The landing point is distant approximately 20 km from Ching-Te, so some of it's ejecta may have been sampled by Apollo 17. According to the altimetric profile of QuickMap, the crater is 3.5 km in diameter, and 670 m deep. Ching-Te is a Chinese male name that has no connection with any specific personality of history (astronomer, mathematician, philosopher, etc). Initially, Ching-Te and other informal (unofficial) names were only created to identify tiny or small features present on detailed maps of Topophotomap series, which were made by NASA, based on the images captured by the Apollo missions. For example, in the legends of the map sheet showing Ching-Te (Topophotomap 42C3S3) is written: Names Information: The following names are unofficial and used only for the identifications of features on this map: CHING-TE, PIT RUDOLPH, RIMA CARMEN and STELLA. Later, in 1976, most of the names for small features, but not all, were officially approved by the International Astronomical Union. A detailed #-D visualization of Ching-Te can be seen here. Use the "Autorotate" and "Vertical Exaggeration" functions below the image:

Ricardo Jose Vaz Tolentino

Technical details
‎September 13, ‎2014, ‏‎02:17:48 (05:17:48 UT).
Sky-Watcher Collapsible Truss-Tube DOB + Orion StarShoot Solar System Color Imager III Camera + Celestron Ultima 2X Barlow - just one frame.

Related Links
21st Century Atlas chart 8.
Ricardo's website

Yesterday's LPOD: Over the Pole And in the Hole

Tomorrow's LPOD: T-Rex Smile



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