- Cassini (lunar crater)
:"This is about the lunar crater; for the Martian one, see
Cassini (Martian crater) ."
lunar crater data
latitude=40.2
N_or_S=N
longitude=4.6
E_or_W=E
diameter=57 km
depth=1.2 km
colong=356
eponym=Giovanni D. CassiniJacques Cassini Cassini is a lunar
impact crater that is located in the Palus Nebularum, at the eastern end ofMare Imbrium . To the northeast is the Promontorium Agassiz, the southern tip of theMontes Alpes mountain range. South by south-east of Cassini is the Theaetetus crater. To the northwest is the lone peakMons Piton .The floor of the crater is flooded, and is likely as old as the surrounding "maria". The surface is peppered with a multitude of impacts, including a pair of significant craters contained entirely within the rim. Cassini A is the larger of these two, and it lies just north-east of the crater center. A hilly ridge area runs from this inner crater toward the south-east. Near the south-west rim of Cassini is the smaller crater Cassini B.
The walls of this crater are narrow and irregular in form but remain intact despite the lava flooding. Beyond the crater rim is a significant and irregular outer .
For unknown reasons, this crater was omitted from early maps of the Moon. This crater is not of recent origin, however, so the omission was most likely an error on the part of the map-makers.
atellite 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 Cassini crater.
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.