- Aristarchus (crater)
lunar crater data
caption=Aristarchus (center) and Herodotus (right) fromApollo 15 . "NASA photo".
latitude=23.7
N_or_S=N
longitude=47.4
E_or_W=W
diameter=40 km
depth=3.7 km
colong=48
eponym=Aristarchus
of SamosAristarchus is a prominent lunar
impact crater that lies in the northwest part of the Moon's near side. It is considered the brightest of the large formations on the lunar surface, with analbedo nearly double that of most lunar features. The feature is bright enough to be visible to the naked eye, and is dazzling in a largetelescope . It is also readily identified when most of thelunar surface is illuminated by earthshine.The crater is located at the southeastern edge of the Aristarchus plateau, an elevated area that contains a number of volcanic features, such as sinuous
rilles . This area is also noted for the large number of reportedtransient lunar phenomena , as well as recent emissions ofradon gas as measured by theLunar Prospector spacecraft.Aristarchus was originally named after the Greek astronomer
Aristarchus of Samos by the Italian map maker Giovanni Riccioli. His work "Almagestum novum" ("New Almagest"), published in 1651, gave the spot-shaped telescopic features (later called "craters")eponym s of noted astronomers and philosophers. Although it was already widely adopted, the name didn't become an official international standard until a vote by the IAU General Assembly in 1935. [cite book | author=M. A. Blagg, K. Müller, W. H. Wesley, S. A. Saunder, J. H. G. Franz | title=Named Lunar Formations | publisher=Percy Lund, Humphries & Co. Ltd. | location=London | year=1935 | url=http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1935QB595.B6....... ]elenography
Aristarchus is located on an elevated rocky rise, known as the Aristarchus plateau, in the midst of the
Oceanus Procellarum , a large expanse of lunar "mare". This is a tilted crustal block, about 200 km across, that rises to a maximum altitude of 2 km above the "mare" in the southeastern section.cite web | url = http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/clemen/cmaris.html | title = Aristarchus Region: Multispectral Mosaic of the Aristarchus Crater and Plateau | publisher = Lunar and Planetary Institute |accessdate = 2006-08-08 ] Aristarchus is just to the east of the crater Herodotus and theVallis Schröteri , and south of a system of narrow sinuousrille s namedRimae Aristarchus .The main reason for the crater's brightness is that it is a young formation, approximately 450 million years old, and the
solar wind has not yet had time to darken the excavated material by the process ofspace weathering . The impact occurred following the creation of the ray crater Copernicus, but before the appearance of Tycho.The brightest feature of this crater is the steep central peak. Sections of the interior floor appear relatively level, but
Lunar Orbiter photograph s reveal the surface is covered in many small hills, streaky gouges, and some minor fractures. The crater has a terraced outer wall, roughly orpolygon al in shape, and covered in a bright blanket of ejecta. These spreads out into bright rays to the south and south-east, suggesting that Aristarchus was most likely formed by an oblique impact from the northeast, and their composition includes material from both the Aristarchus plateau and thelunar mare .Remote sensing
In 1911, Professor Robert W. Wood used
ultraviolet photography to take images of the crater area. He discovered the plateau had an anomalous appearance in the ultraviolet, and an area to the north appeared to give indications of asulfur deposit.cite web | last = Darling | first = David O. | url = http://www.ltpresearch.org/aristarchus1.htm | title = Aristarchus: Lunar Transient Phenomenon History | publisher = L.T.P. Research | accessdate = 2006-08-08 ] This colorful area is sometimes referred to as "Wood's Spot", an alternate name for the Aristarchus Plateau.Spectra taken of this crater during the
Clementine mission were used to performmineral mapping. The data indicated that the central peak is a type of rock calledanorthosite , which is a slow-cooling form ofigneous rock composed ofplagioclase feldspar . By contrast the outer wall istroctolite , a rock composed of equal partsplagioclase andolivine .The Aristarchus region was part of a
Hubble Space Telescope study in 2005 that was investigating the presence ofoxygen -rich glassy soils in the form of the mineralilmenite . Baseline measurements were made of theApollo 15 andApollo 17 landing sites, where the chemistry is known, and these were compared to Aristarchus. The Hubble Advanced Camera for Surveys was used to photograph the crater in visual andultraviolet light. The crater was determined to have especially rich concentrations of ilmenite, atitanium oxide mineral that could potentially be used in the future by a lunar settlement for extracting oxygen. [cite web | title=Is There Oxygen on the Moon? | work=Time Online
url=http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1120755,00.html | accessmonthday=October 24 | accessyear=2005]Transient lunar phenomena
The region of the Aristarchus plateau has been the site of many reported
transient lunar phenomena . Such events include temporary obscurations and colorations of the surface, and catalogues of these show that more than one-third of the most reliable spottings come from this locale.cite web | url=http://www.cs.nott.ac.uk/~acc/Lunar/cameron.pdf | last = W. Cameron | title=Analyses of Lunar Transient Phenomena (LTP) Observations from 557–1994 A.D.] In 1971 whenApollo 15 passed 110 kilometers above the Aristarchus plateau, a significant rise inalpha particle s was detected. These particles are believed to be caused by the decay of radon-222, aradioactive gas with ahalf-life of only 3.8 days. TheLunar Prospector mission later confirmed Radon-222 emissions from this crater. [cite journal|last = S. Lawson, W. Feldman, D. Lawrence, K. Moore, R. Elphic, and R. Belian | title=Recent outgassing from the lunar surface: the Lunar Prospector alpha particle spectrometer | journal=J. Geophys. Res. | volume = 110 | pages=doi=10.1029/2005JE002433 | date =2005|doi = 10.1029/2005JE002433 | date =2005] These observations could be explained by either the slow and visually imperceptible diffusion of gas to the surface, or by discrete explosive events.atellite craters
Surrounding Aristarchus are several smaller craters, many of which are probably
secondary crater s. Secondary craters form when large blocks ejected from the primary crater reimpact the surface at high velocities. By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing a letter on the side of the crater mid-point that is closest to the primary crater. [cite book | author=B. Bussey & P. Spudis | title=The Clementine Atlas of the Moon | publisher=Cambridge University Press | year=2004 | id=ISBN 0-521-81528-2 ]The following craters have been renamed by the IAU.
* Aristarchus A — "See" Väisälä.
* Aristarchus C — "See" Toscanelli.References
ee also
*
Apollo 18
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