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September 8, 2007

RARE IMAGE OF A COMMON CRATER

Filed under: , — chuckwood @ 12:01 am

LPOD-2005-03-03.jpeg
image by Mike Wirths

This is an encore of an excellent LPOD from March 3, 2005. I hope you re-enjoy it!

There are about 600 named craters on the lunar nearside, but I would guess that contributors have sent LPOD good images of at most about 10% of them. Everyone knows the superstar craters that get almost all of an observer’s attention, but the more humdrum craters have stories to tell us too. For example, here is 39 km wide Manilius – can you find it in Rukl’s Atlas of the Moon without using the index? Mike’s view has nearly the same sun illumination as the Lunar Orbiter IV image but his exposure is better and his image lacks those obnoxious horizontal framelet lines! The top half of the wall of Manilius appears to mostly be a very sharp scarp – if you started to slide you wouldn’t stop until you reached the mounds of talus half way down. Only along the southeastern and eastern rims are crude terraces still attached to the wall, everywhere else they have slid down, crowding the floor. There is a hint of layering at the very top of the northern rim where a delicate shadow marks a ridge that can be traced partway around that part of the rim. The floor of Manilius has two largish peaks and some hills surrounded by smooth material. If the material were dark at high Sun I’d say it was mare, but it isn’t so perhaps it is impact melt. Unrelated to Manilius itself is the small dark halo crater to its west. It looks like this is the type of dark halo crater that results from an impact that excavates fresh mare material and scatters it over a thin surficial layer of brighter material.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details:
18 Jan, 2005. Temp -21C. Starmaster 18″ + Atik B&W webcam + 5X’s Barlow + IR passband filter + Registax 2 + Images Plus.

Related Links:
Rükl charts 23 & 34

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3 Comments »

  1. There appears to be a horizontal line crossing the upper portion of the crater starting at the shadow at the same level as the small crater on the upper right rim and extending to the opposite rim and into the glacis on the upper left portion of the crater. This does not appear to be an artifact, so must be a rille that is younger than Manilius. It would be interesting to know just how old the crater is; it is listed as Eratosthenian, but that spans a period of about 2 billion years. The age and nature of the rille could lead to whole host of new questions.
    Thanks,
    Howard

    Comment by Howard E — September 8, 2007 @ 6:37 am

  2. My problem with Manilius the first time I studied it was that there is another nearby crater called ‘Menelaus’. Is it just me, or is there a problem with that?

    Comment by Lunabuilder — September 8, 2007 @ 7:46 am

  3. The dark-halo craterlet to the west of Manilius was photographed during the mission of Apollo 15.
    (orbital Hasselblad photography)
    See:
    http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/apollo/frame/?AS15-93-12683
    Manilius itself is the bright curvature in the lower left corner.

    Danny Caes.

    Comment by caligula — September 8, 2007 @ 9:05 am

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