Difference between revisions of "April 23, 2005"

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<td width="50%"><h2><nobr>The Best Lava Flow on the Moon</nobr></h2></td>
 
 
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<p align="center"><b>The Best Lava Flow on the Moon</b></p>
 
<p align="center"><b>The Best Lava Flow on the Moon</b></p>
 
<p align="left">Mare basins are filled by a vast number of individual lava flows that erupted from many vents. Because the flows are thin - estimates are typically 10 to 30 m - their edges were relatively quickly eroded away by subsequent small impacts, and few individual flows are now recognizable. The absolute best preserved lava flow on the Moon erupted from vents near the crater Euler and traveled nearly 600 km toward the center of Mare Imbrium. This flow was fantastically shown on Apollo 15 images, but has always been very difficult to image from earth. Until last year when KC Pau, the amazing amateur who images the Moon from his skyscraper balcony in Hong Kong took the best ever Earth-based image of a lunar lava flow - that image was LPOD for [[July_19,_2004|July 19, 2004.]] Now KC has improved significantly on that triumph with today’s LPOD.  The lower sun angle and larger image scale better define the margins of the flow. The July LPOD labels all the features, but the crater Lambert is at the bottom of the image and the Zirkel Ridge crosses diagonally to the NW from the crater. In the previous LPOD I suggested that the Zirkel Ridge must have formed after the lava flow which probably could not have climbed over the ridge. KC’s new image shows that part of the lava flow is apparently stopped by and dammed behind the unnamed ridge between McDonald and Carlini. This suggests that this smaller ridge did exist before the eruption. If so the tectonic deformation of Imbrium was still occurring about 2.5 b.y. ago when the flow is estimated to have been erupted. Each image adds to our understanding!</p>
 
<p align="left">Mare basins are filled by a vast number of individual lava flows that erupted from many vents. Because the flows are thin - estimates are typically 10 to 30 m - their edges were relatively quickly eroded away by subsequent small impacts, and few individual flows are now recognizable. The absolute best preserved lava flow on the Moon erupted from vents near the crater Euler and traveled nearly 600 km toward the center of Mare Imbrium. This flow was fantastically shown on Apollo 15 images, but has always been very difficult to image from earth. Until last year when KC Pau, the amazing amateur who images the Moon from his skyscraper balcony in Hong Kong took the best ever Earth-based image of a lunar lava flow - that image was LPOD for [[July_19,_2004|July 19, 2004.]] Now KC has improved significantly on that triumph with today’s LPOD.  The lower sun angle and larger image scale better define the margins of the flow. The July LPOD labels all the features, but the crater Lambert is at the bottom of the image and the Zirkel Ridge crosses diagonally to the NW from the crater. In the previous LPOD I suggested that the Zirkel Ridge must have formed after the lava flow which probably could not have climbed over the ridge. KC’s new image shows that part of the lava flow is apparently stopped by and dammed behind the unnamed ridge between McDonald and Carlini. This suggests that this smaller ridge did exist before the eruption. If so the tectonic deformation of Imbrium was still occurring about 2.5 b.y. ago when the flow is estimated to have been erupted. Each image adds to our understanding!</p>
<blockquote><p align="right">&#8212; [mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</blockquote>
+
<blockquote>
<p align="left"><p><b>Technical Details:</b><br>
+
<p align="right">&#8212; [mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</blockquote>
 +
<p align="left"><b>Technical Details:</b><br>
 
April 18, 2005. 10" f/6 Newtonian + 5X barlow + Philips Toucam Pro. Seeing was 6/10.</p>
 
April 18, 2005. 10" f/6 Newtonian + 5X barlow + Philips Toucam Pro. Seeing was 6/10.</p>
 
<p><b>Related Links:</b><br>
 
<p><b>Related Links:</b><br>

Revision as of 17:20, 17 January 2015

The Best Lava Flow on the Moon

LPOD-2005-04-23.jpeg

Image Credit: K.C. Pau


The Best Lava Flow on the Moon

Mare basins are filled by a vast number of individual lava flows that erupted from many vents. Because the flows are thin - estimates are typically 10 to 30 m - their edges were relatively quickly eroded away by subsequent small impacts, and few individual flows are now recognizable. The absolute best preserved lava flow on the Moon erupted from vents near the crater Euler and traveled nearly 600 km toward the center of Mare Imbrium. This flow was fantastically shown on Apollo 15 images, but has always been very difficult to image from earth. Until last year when KC Pau, the amazing amateur who images the Moon from his skyscraper balcony in Hong Kong took the best ever Earth-based image of a lunar lava flow - that image was LPOD for July 19, 2004. Now KC has improved significantly on that triumph with today’s LPOD. The lower sun angle and larger image scale better define the margins of the flow. The July LPOD labels all the features, but the crater Lambert is at the bottom of the image and the Zirkel Ridge crosses diagonally to the NW from the crater. In the previous LPOD I suggested that the Zirkel Ridge must have formed after the lava flow which probably could not have climbed over the ridge. KC’s new image shows that part of the lava flow is apparently stopped by and dammed behind the unnamed ridge between McDonald and Carlini. This suggests that this smaller ridge did exist before the eruption. If so the tectonic deformation of Imbrium was still occurring about 2.5 b.y. ago when the flow is estimated to have been erupted. Each image adds to our understanding!

Chuck Wood

Technical Details:
April 18, 2005. 10" f/6 Newtonian + 5X barlow + Philips Toucam Pro. Seeing was 6/10.

Related Links:
Apollo 15 View
Rukl Plates 10, 20

Tomorrow's LPOD: Fabulous Fab!



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Charles A. Wood

Technical Consultant:
Anthony Ayiomamitis

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