Apollo (crater)

Apollo (crater)
Diameter 537 km[1]
Colongitude 161° at sunrise
Eponym Project Apollo

Apollo is an enormous impact crater located in the southern hemisphere on the far side of the Moon. This formation dwarfs the large crater Oppenheimer that is located next to the western rim. The crater Barringer lies across the northern wall. To the southeast is the crater Anders, and Kleymenov is just to the east of the rim.

Apollo is a double-ringed walled plain whose inner ring is roughly half the diameter of the outer wall. Both the outer wall and the interior have been heavily worn and eroded by subsequent impacts, so that significant parts of the outer and inner walls now consist of irregular and incised sections of mountainous arcs.

The interior floor is covered in a multitude of craters of various sizes. Several of the more notable craters have received names. The IAU used the eponyms of people associated with the Apollo program when designating some of these formations.

Sections of Apollo's interior have been resurfaced with lava, leaving patches of the floor with a lower albedo than the surroundings. There is a large patch of this lunar mare in the middle part of the inner ring, which contains some ray system markings. A long stretch of the mare lies along the southern part of the crater. There is also a smaller section near the western rim.

Interior craters

Several craters within the Apollo impact have been named to honor deceased NASA employees.

Dryden is attached to the west-northwestern exterior of the inner ring. Chaffee is a similar-sized crater that lies partly across the southwest section of the inner ring. In the southeast part of the outer crater is Borman. Inside the inner ring are the craters Resnik, McAuliffe, and Onizuka, and the JarvisMcNair crater pair. The crater Smith lies across the northern part of the inner ring.

In 2006 the IAU approved a proposal to name seven interior craters to honor the astronauts of the Space Shuttle Columbia.[2][3]

Crater Coordinates Diameter Name source
Chawla 15 km Kalpana Chawla
D. Brown 15 km David McD. Brown
Husband 29 km Richard D. Husband
L. Clark 16 km Laurel B. S. Clark
McCool 21 km William C. McCool
M. Anderson 17 km Michael P. Anderson
Ramon 17 km Ilan Ramon

Three of the crater names include the respective astronaut's first initials to distinguish them from the existing craters called Anderson, Brown and Clark.

References

  1. ^ Don E. Wilhelms and Charles J. Byrne (23 January 2009). "Stratigraphy of Lunar Craters". http://www.imageagain.com/Strata/StratigraphyCraters.2.0.htm. 
  2. ^ Blue, Jennifer (2006-07-27). "Names for the Columbia astronauts provisionally approved". USGS Astrogeology. http://astrogeology.usgs.gov/HotTopics/index.php?/archives/147-Names-for-the-Columbia-astronauts-provisionally-approved.html. Retrieved 2006-06-08. 
  3. ^ Blue, Jennifer (2006-08-30). "Provisional Names Approved". USGS. http://astrogeology.usgs.gov/HotTopics/index.php?/archives/203-Provisional-Names-Approved.html. Retrieved 2007-05-07. 

External links