October 1, 2012

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Whitewashed!

LPOD-Oct1-12.jpg
image by Dmitry Makolkin, Moscow, Russia

LPOD-Oct1-12b.jpg
Tycho acted like a giant spray paint can, spewing white across the Moon. Just beyond Tycho the coverage was nearly complete, but beyond about one to two crater diameters the pulverised bright ejecta travelled as streamers, leaving progressively more underlying surface uncovered with distance. But in this area probably everywhere received at least a dusting. Which makes it all the more remarkable that some small areas of darkness seem to overlay the 100 million year old rays. One previously discussed example is the crater Buch B, the small bright crater with spindly dark rays near the center of the right edge. Two years ago similar dark splash deposits were discovered at Maurolycus A and F. With Dmitry's image we can add another dark spot associated with the crater Walther A (W. A). In this case the dark material is on the north side of the crater A, and on the LRO QuickMap a slightly dark mantle can be seen draped over topography. B. Ray Hawke and his colleagues interpreted the Buch B dark material as ejecta that the crater B excavated from a pluton of iron rich rock. This is material similar to what formed the maria. The pluton was undoubted ancient, 3 billion years or sp, but the crater B was younger than Tycho. The craters A, F and W. A presumably had the same origin. If so there were at least four plutons in this section of th highlands and it is surprising that more young impacts didn't excavate more dark debris. Oh, did you notice the bright oblique impact feature to the upper left of Walther A? That is the crater that makes Cassini's Bright Spot. Dmitry's image even shows the small crater's dark floor.


Chuck Wood

Technical Details
Scope: TAL-250K. Filter: Astronomik IR Pro 742nm. Camera: VAC-136, 1280x960x30fps CMOS USB 2.0; 200 frames of 2000 are stacked in Autostakkert!2; Levels, curves, deconvolution.

Related Links
Rükl plate 66
Dmitry's website

Yesterday's LPOD: Cloudsourcing Vents

Tomorrow's LPOD: Linear Mystery



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