Difference between revisions of "April 16, 2004"

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===COMMENTS?===  
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Click on this icon [[image:PostIcon.jpg]] at the upper right to post a comment.
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{{HoverImage|LPOD-2004-04-16.jpeg|LPOD-2004-04-16b.jpeg}}</div>
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<td><div align="center"><p>Image Credit:  [http://images.jsc.nasa.gov/luceneweb/caption_direct.jsp?photoId=AS16-121-19449 Apollo 16 AS16-121-19449]</p></div></td>
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<p class="story" align="center"><b>Eastern Rays </b></p>
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<p class="story" align="left">I love views from unfamiliar perspectives because they force me to look freshly at the areas shown. This image taken by Apollo 16 astronauts doesn't disappoint. As the astronauts flew over the eastern limb they took this photo looking across Mare Fecunditatis to Mare Nectaris and the bright lunar highlands beyond. High solar illumination (and unsharp mask in Photoshop!) highlighted the strong albedo contrasts of dark maria material and bright crater rays. The crater Langrenus is at the bottom of the image (mouse over) with its grayish radiating rays. To the south (left) is the 33 km wide crater Petavius B, whose Proclus-like vee-shaped ray pattern demonstrates was formed by an oblique impact. On the right side of the image is the familiar pair Messier and Pickering (oops - that's an old designation, the crater with the parallel railway track-like rays is now called Messier A). Notice that you can also see the butterfly wing rays extending out from Messier itself. These rays, perpendicular to the Messier A ones, are harder to see, but are characteristic of a very low angle oblique impact. Back to the left half of the image you can see at least four sets of rays that converge outside the frame on one or the other of the two amazingly bright (and small) ray craters, Stevinus A and Furnerius A. Another bright ray swath comes eastward from Rosse in the middle of Nectaris. This particular ray is peculiar because it so large. Some people have suggested that it is actually a ray from Tycho. Other rays here appear to be orphans. Two roughly parallel rays passing near McClure and Crosier have no obvious source crater, as is true for a long ray passing perpendicular to a line joining Langrenus and Messier. Looking at the ray-crossed surfaces of Fecunditatis and Nectaris makes it easy to understand how dark mare material gets lightened over time. Some mare deposits have been completely veneered by rays and other ejecta so that we can only detect them by small dark halo craters that excavate underlying dark mare. Such slightly buried mare are called cryptomare. </p>
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<p align="right" class="story">&#8212; [mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</p>
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<p class="story"><b>Related Links:</b><br>
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[http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/moon99/pdf/8035.pdf Composition &amp; Origin Crater Rays]</p>
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<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[April 15, 2004|A Burning Issue]] </p>
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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[April 17, 2004|Cassini North]] </p>
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<p align="center" class="main_titles"><b>Author & Editor:</b><br>
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[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Charles A. Wood]</p>
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Latest revision as of 19:15, 7 February 2015

Eastern Rays


LPOD-2004-04-16.jpeg

LPOD-2004-04-16b.jpeg

Eastern Rays

I love views from unfamiliar perspectives because they force me to look freshly at the areas shown. This image taken by Apollo 16 astronauts doesn't disappoint. As the astronauts flew over the eastern limb they took this photo looking across Mare Fecunditatis to Mare Nectaris and the bright lunar highlands beyond. High solar illumination (and unsharp mask in Photoshop!) highlighted the strong albedo contrasts of dark maria material and bright crater rays. The crater Langrenus is at the bottom of the image (mouse over) with its grayish radiating rays. To the south (left) is the 33 km wide crater Petavius B, whose Proclus-like vee-shaped ray pattern demonstrates was formed by an oblique impact. On the right side of the image is the familiar pair Messier and Pickering (oops - that's an old designation, the crater with the parallel railway track-like rays is now called Messier A). Notice that you can also see the butterfly wing rays extending out from Messier itself. These rays, perpendicular to the Messier A ones, are harder to see, but are characteristic of a very low angle oblique impact. Back to the left half of the image you can see at least four sets of rays that converge outside the frame on one or the other of the two amazingly bright (and small) ray craters, Stevinus A and Furnerius A. Another bright ray swath comes eastward from Rosse in the middle of Nectaris. This particular ray is peculiar because it so large. Some people have suggested that it is actually a ray from Tycho. Other rays here appear to be orphans. Two roughly parallel rays passing near McClure and Crosier have no obvious source crater, as is true for a long ray passing perpendicular to a line joining Langrenus and Messier. Looking at the ray-crossed surfaces of Fecunditatis and Nectaris makes it easy to understand how dark mare material gets lightened over time. Some mare deposits have been completely veneered by rays and other ejecta so that we can only detect them by small dark halo craters that excavate underlying dark mare. Such slightly buried mare are called cryptomare.

Chuck Wood

Related Links:
Composition & Origin Crater Rays

Yesterday's LPOD: A Burning Issue

Tomorrow's LPOD: Cassini North


Author & Editor:
Charles A. Wood

 


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