Cayley (crater)

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Crater characteristics
Coordinates 4.0° N, 15.1° E
Diameter 14 km
Depth 3.1 km
Colongitude   345° at sunrise
Eponym Arthur Cayley

Cayley is a small lunar impact crater that is located in a basaltic-lava-flooded region to the west of Mare Tranquillitatis. It lies to the northwest of the smaller De Morgan and the larger D'Arrest craters. West and slightly north of the crater is Whewell crater, a crater of about the same dimensions. To the north is a linear rille designated Rima Ariadaeus, which follows a course to the east-southeast.

This is a circular, bowl-shaped formation with a small interior floor at the mid-point. (Small being relative to the overall diameter, as it occupies about one-fourth the total cross-section.) The sloping interior walls are relatively light in hue, having a higher albedo as the surrounding terrain. However it is not nearly as bright as the slightly larger Dionysius crater to the east-southeast, and lacks a ray system.

The terrain surrounding the crater is somewhat similar to the lunar mares, but has a slightly higher albedo and is overlapped at the eastern edge by the Mare Tranquillitatis. Lunar scientists suspect that this plain may have resulted from deposits of ejecta from the formation of an impact basin. (The most likely source is the Mare Imbrium impact basin to the northwest.)

[edit] References

  • Charles A. Wood, "Looking Between Craters," Sky & Telescope, March, 2006.
  • See the reference table for the general listing of literature and web sites that were used in the compilation of this page.
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