Difference between revisions of "September 6, 2004"

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[mailto:anthony@perseus.gr Anthony Ayiomamitis]</p>
 
[mailto:anthony@perseus.gr Anthony Ayiomamitis]</p>
 
<p align="center" class="main_titles"><b>Contacte al Traductor:</b><br>
 
<p align="center" class="main_titles"><b>Contacte al Traductor:</b><br>
[mailto:pablolonnie@yahoo.com.mx" class="one Pablo Lonnie Pacheco Railey ]</p>
+
[mailto:pablolonnie@yahoo.com.mx Pablo Lonnie Pacheco Railey ]</p>
 
<p align="center" class="main_titles"><b>A service of:</b><br>
 
<p align="center" class="main_titles"><b>A service of:</b><br>
 
[http://www.observingthesky.org/ ObservingTheSky.Org]</p>
 
[http://www.observingthesky.org/ ObservingTheSky.Org]</p>

Revision as of 17:37, 11 January 2015

Terrific Taruntius


Terrific Taruntius

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Image Credit: Tom Leech


Terrific Taruntius

Taruntius is an often overlooked crater. There are few photos of it by amateurs or spacecraft. This great image by Tom Leech shows what we have been missing. The 58 km wide crater is the same diameter as the much more familiar Erastothenes, but is only 1.1 km deep compared to the latter's 3.4 km depth. Whereas Eratosthenes has a broad inner wall of terraces, Taruntius has almost none. Taruntius' central peak is relatively small, and Erathosthenes' is broad and complex. These differences between two relatively young and originally similar impact craters imply that Taruntius has been altered by the rise of mare under it. Like Atlas, Taruntius is a floor-fractured crater. Taruntius has a strong inner ridge ring - the tops of terraces displaced from the crater wall? - and delicate concentric rilles visible on a Lunar Orbiter I image. What is visible under high sun (mouseover) are patches of dark material south of the central peak and near the north rim. Tom's image just reveals the tiny volcanic explosion crater that was the source of the southern ash deposit. The northern vent may be the elongated crater south of Taruntius C (Cameron). The full Moon view also shows that plumes of ash fell outside the north rim, and also west of Taruntius. Both Tom's image and the Lunar Orbiter I photo show ejecta from Taruntius on the nearby Mare Fecunditatis, and Taruntius also has a faint ray system. Based on its rays, Taruntius is considered Copernican in age, meaning younger than 1 billion years. This means that the mare lavas that uplifted its floor and exploded onto its surface were very young since most mare basalts are 3.5 to 2.5 b.y. old.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details:
Aug 31, 2004. Celestron C-14, Pentax 6x7, 1.4x teleconverter, Toucam 740k, k3ccdtools, Registax.

Related Links:
Great Lunar Orbiter I View
Rukl Atlas of the Moon sheet 37

Tomorrow's LPOD: Helen's Husband

 



Author & Editor:
Charles A. Wood

Technical Consultant:
Anthony Ayiomamitis

Contacte al Traductor:
Pablo Lonnie Pacheco Railey

A service of:
ObservingTheSky.Org

Visit these other PODs:
Astronomy | Mars | Earth

 


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