Asclepi (crater)

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Crater characteristics
Coordinates 55.1° S, 25.4° E
Diameter 42 km
Depth 2.9 km
Colongitude   335° at sunrise
Eponym Giuseppe Asclepi

Asclepi is a heavily worn lunar crater that lies in the rugged southern highlands of the Moon. The outer rim has been worn down and rounded by many millions of years of subsequent impacts, so that it is now nearly level with the surrounding terrain. As a result the crater is now little more than a depression in the surface. The interior is nearly flat and relatively featureless.

The rim of Asclepi is marked only by a small crater across the western rim, and several tiny craterlets. The satellite crater 'Hommel K' is a more recent impact that is attached to the southeast rim. This is a bowl-shaped formation with a sharp edge and a small central floor.

Nearby craters of note include Pitiscus to the north-northeast, Hommel due east, and Baco to the northwest. To the west-southwest is the smaller Tannerus crater.

[edit] Satellite craters

By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater mid-point that is closest to Asclepi crater.

Asclepi Latitude Longitude Diameter
A 52.9° S 23.0° E 14 km
B 54.1° S 23.9° E 19 km
C 53.3° S 23.4° E 11 km
D 53.5° S 24.1° E 18 km
E 52.1° S 24.1° E 7 km
G 53.3° S 24.8° E 5 km
H 52.7° S 25.1° E 19 km

[edit] References

  • See the reference table for the general listing of literature and web sites that were used in the compilation of this page.