June 17, 2024

From LPOD
Revision as of 00:05, 17 June 2024 by Api (talk | contribs) (Created page with "__NOTOC__ =Smoothered= Originally published March 1, 2014 <!-- Start of content --> <!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:0:<h1> --> <!-- ws:start:WikiTextLocalImageRul...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Smoothered

Originally published March 1, 2014 LPOD-Mar1-08.jpg
image by Jérôme Grenier; north is to the upper left

Julius Caesar - the 90 km wide crater, not the Roman general and destroyer of a republic - is about 500 km from the Apennine Front, the rim of the Imbrium impact basin. The crater and the area surrounding it were blasted, scoured, pelted and pasted by debris falling from the sky and rushing across the surface. Caesar, its F and P, Boscovich and a few other features here are pre-Imbrium craters that survived, barely. Other than the much younger small impacts, most of the other crateriform structures - like Boscovich P and perhaps E - are probably Imbrium secondary craters. The line of multiple overlapping craters - Boscovich P - is characteristic of basin secondaries, as is its radial alignment with Imbrium. The dark mare lava in Boscovich, Caesar and a few other low spots was erupted much later. The slathering of the surface with the pasty ejecta mush created undulating terrain with small groves and hills. At Boscovich E it looks like course ejecta surged along the surface and spilled into and then out of the crater. Near the bottom left corner the arrow points to a small dome-like feature. This may be a volcanic dome fed by magma rising from depth, but it might also be some pre-existing hill plastered and smoothed by the ejecta flow. Finally note the delicate straight rille indicated by the three arrowheads. At first I thought this was a seam boundary for a mosaic, but it changes its width and character along strike. And then I thought I've seen this before! It was discovered by K.C. Pau, and I thought there was an LPOD of it but I couldn't find it. I did find one of K.C.'s that confirms it with no doubt. This is Pau's Rille.

Chuck Wood
March 1, 2014 update: Feeling better, but still lousy. Found this excellent March 1 LPOD from 2008, still good 6 years later. Sadly, K.C.'s image that I had linked to is on the LPOD PhotoGallery which is still no longer available. What a loss. I'm going to bed.

Technical Details
13 February 2007. Orion Optics (UK) OMC 12" + barlow 2x + red filter + Dmk31 AF03.

Related Links
Jérôme's website

Yesterday's LPOD: A Lunar Fairy Tale

Tomorrow's LPOD: Notice the Pineapple?



COMMENTS?

Register, Log in, and join in the comments.