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Jacobi (crater)

Lunar surface depression

Jacobi (crater)

Summary

Lunar surface depression

FieldValue
imageJacobi crater 4094 h3.jpg
captionLunar Orbiter 4 image
coordinates
diameter68 km
depth3.3 km
colong349
eponymKarl G. J. Jacobi
The crater area on the bottom left of a selenochromatic format image (Si)
Slightly oblique Lunar Orbiter 4 image

Jacobi is a lunar impact crater that is located in the southern highlands on the near side of the Moon. It lies southeast of the crater Lilius, with Cuvier to the north-northwest and Baco to the northeast. The crater is 68 kilometers in diameter and 3.3 kilometers in depth. It is from the Pre-Nectarian period, 4.55 to 3.92 billion years ago.

This crater has a worn rim that is overlain by several craters along the southern face, including Jacobi J, and a pair on the northern rim. The result is an outer rim that appears flattened along the northern and southern faces. The larger of the craters on the north rim, Jacobi O, forms a member of a chain of craters that form a rough line across the interior floor from northeast to southwest. The central part of this chain in particular forms a merger of several tiny craters at the midpoint of the floor. The remainder of the floor is level, perhaps as a result of erosion or deposited material.{{cite book

The overlapping crater triplets of Jacobi F, Jacobi E, and Jacobi G form a line to the south of Jacobi crater. The crater was named after the 19th-century Prussian-Jewish mathematician Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi by the International Astronomical Union in 1935.

Satellite craters

By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater midpoint that is closest to Jacobi.{{cite book

JacobiLatitudeLongitudeDiameter
A58.5° S16.0° E28 km
B54.4° S13.9° E14 km
C59.8° S10.6° E35 km
D60.8° S10.6° E21 km
E58.5° S11.8° E24 km
F58.5° S9.6° E42 km
G58.4° S13.9° E42 km
H58.5° S10.6° E9 km
J58.0° S10.3° E19 km
K56.7° S10.8° E9 km
L55.4° S15.4° E9 km
M57.8° S12.1° E10 km
N56.3° S11.8° E8 km
O55.7° S11.9° E17 km
P57.3° S13.8° E15 km
Q55.8° S14.0° E4 km
R55.3° S13.8° E5 km
S57.5° S14.9° E5 km
T56.0° S15.2° E6 km
U55.0° S13.2° E7 km
W56.0° S10.8° E7 km
Z59.1° S11.9° E5 km

References

  • {{cite web

References

  1. ''Autostar Suite Astronomer Edition''. CD-ROM. Meade, April 2006.
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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