Jump to content

Dirichlet–Jackson Basin

Coordinates: 14°00′N 158°00′W / 14.0°N 158.0°W / 14.0; -158.0
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Rich Farmbrough (talk | contribs) at 10:05, 19 August 2017 (Fix caps in section header and other minor fixes using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Dirichlet–Jackson Basin
Oblique view of western Dirichlet–Jackson Basin from Apollo 11. Raimond is near the central horizon.
Coordinates14°00′N 158°00′W / 14.0°N 158.0°W / 14.0; -158.0
Diameter470 km[1]
EponymDirichlet and Jackson craters

The Dirichlet–Jackson Basin is a pre-Nectarian impact basin on the far side of the moon. It is named after the craters Dirichlet (on the southeast margin) and Jackson (northwest of the basin). It lies to the north of the similar-sized basin Korolev.

The basin is not obvious on the lunar surface due to being obscured by subsequent impacts. It was discovered from topographic mapping by the Clementine spacecraft in 2000.[1]

Craters within the basin include Raimond, Bredikhin, Mitra, and Henyey (adjacent to Dirichlet), as well as many satellite craters. Due south of the basin is Engel'gardt (and the Selenean summit). To the southwest are Lebedinskiy and Zhukovskiy, and McMath is to the northwest. To the northeast is Mach, and to the southeast is Tsander.

References

  1. ^ a b Planet-Wide Lunar Digital Elevation Model, A. C. Cook, M. S. Robinson, and T. R. Watters. Lunar and Planetary Science XXXI, paper 1978, 2000.