Difference between revisions of "September 24, 2014"
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<em>[http://lpod.wikispaces.com/21st+Century+Atlas+of+the+Moon 21st Century Atlas]</em> chart F2.<br /> | <em>[http://lpod.wikispaces.com/21st+Century+Atlas+of+the+Moon 21st Century Atlas]</em> chart F2.<br /> | ||
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− | <p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[September 23, 2014|Pink | + | <p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[September 23, 2014|Pink and Grey Lavas]] </p> |
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[September 25, 2014|Switching the High Side]] </p> | <p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[September 25, 2014|Switching the High Side]] </p> | ||
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{{wiki/ArticleFooter}} | {{wiki/ArticleFooter}} |
Revision as of 09:52, 15 March 2015
Black Splash
image from LRO ACT-REACT QuickMap
Korolev X is a well-worn, 26 km diameter crater on the lunar farside. Sometime after its formation a nearby impact dug a fresh 13 km diameter crater, breaching Korolev X’s northern wall and sending a tongue of debris tumbling onto its flat floor. Cascading down this debris is a 13 by 5 km sheet of dark and smooth impact melt, still showing the shrinkage cracks that formed as it cooled. The melt didn’t advance as a single flood, but rather on many glacier-like fronts, each several hundred meters across (B). As the melt spread onto Korolev X’s floor overlapping fronts wrapped around high points leaving kipuka-like islands of older more heavily-cratered terrain (C). Location: Latitude 0.56, Longitude -159.44
Ross Sackett, Memphis Astronomical Society
Technical Details
Images from Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter wide-angle and narrow-angle cameras. 3D visualization using the PIPE 3D Live tool. Images processed in Photoshop to improve contrast.
Related Links
21st Century Atlas chart F2.
Yesterday's LPOD: Pink and Grey Lavas
Tomorrow's LPOD: Switching the High Side
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