Diameter | 42 km |
---|---|
Depth | 3.0 km |
Colongitude | 61° at sunrise |
Eponym | Gerolamo Sersale |
Sirsalis is a relatively young lunar impact crater located near the western lunar limb, to the southwest of the Oceanus Procellarum. The crater lies across a ridge that runs in a north–south direction. It has a sharp edge and a low central peak. The crater overlaps the slightly larger and older Sirsalis A to the west-southwest, and the two form a distinctive feature.
To the east is a rille system named the Rimae Sirsalis. The longest of these rilles follows a line running approximately north-northeast to south-southwest, just clearing the southeastern rim of Sirsalis by about 10 kilometers. This long rille runs 330 kilometers from the shore of Oceanus Procellarum until it crosses the crater Darwin A and intersects the Rimae Darwin to the east of Darwin.
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 Sirsalis.
Sirsalis | Latitude | Longitude | Diameter |
---|---|---|---|
A | 12.7° S | 61.3° W | 49 km |
B | 11.1° S | 63.7° W | 16 km |
C | 10.3° S | 63.8° W | 22 km |
D | 9.9° S | 58.6° W | 35 km |
E | 8.1° S | 56.5° W | 72 km |
F | 13.5° S | 60.1° W | 13 km |
G | 13.7° S | 61.7° W | 30 km |
H | 14.0° S | 62.4° W | 26 km |
J | 13.4° S | 59.8° W | 12 km |
K | 10.4° S | 57.3° W | 7 km |
T | 9.2° S | 53.4° W | 16 km |
Z | 10.7° S | 61.9° W | 91 km |