Difference between revisions of "May 11, 2009"

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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[May 12, 2009|Almost Nothing]] </p>
 
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[May 12, 2009|Almost Nothing]] </p>
 
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Revision as of 21:44, 7 February 2015

Beyond North

LPOD-May11-09.jpg
image by Jocelyn Sérot, France

LPOD-May11-09b.jpg
With a strong libration in latitude of +6°11 when Jocelyn took this image, the North Pole region is strongly tipped into view. Yet we can only see a little more than was visible in the LPOD of two months ago. But no matter how good the libration, this polar region is simply much less spectacular than the area around the South Pole. What basins are responsible for the morphology extremes of both poles. The high mountains of the South Pole are actually parts of the rim of the giant South Pole-Aitken Basin. The North Pole terrain is also dominated by a basin, but this time it is the ejecta from the Imbrium Basin that filled in crater floors and smoothed over other low spots, reducing topographic relief. There must be similar thick deposits of ejecta around SP-A, but that basin is so old that all the visible craters we see in the South Pole region are younger than its ejecta. The opposite is true for the approach to the North Pole - most craters there are older than the Imbrium Basin and its ejecta. For the Moon, the word "basin" is often the answer, now what is the question?


Chuck Wood

Technical Details
2009-05-05, 21h10 UT. Mewlon 210 + 1,9x Barlow (F/D=21) + DMK 31AF03, 15 FPS. Avistack, 350 frames stacked for each image

Related Links
Rükl plate 4


Yesterday's LPOD: Abrasion And Rhino Hide

Tomorrow's LPOD: Almost Nothing



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