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Spörer (crater)

Coordinates: 4°18′S 1°48′E / 4.3°S 1.8°E / -4.3; 1.8
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Spörer
Coordinates4°18′S 1°48′E / 4.3°S 1.8°E / -4.3; 1.8
Diameter27 km
Depth0.3 km
Colongitude2° at sunrise
EponymFriedrich W. G. Spörer

Spörer is a lunar impact crater that lies just about 10 km north of the crater Herschel, and southeast of the lava-flooded Flammarion. About 40 km southeast is Gyldén, and over 60 km northeast is Réaumur.

Its diameter is 27 km long and is about 300 meters deep. Also, the area is around 400 km² and the perimeter is around 75 km.

The crater is named after Gustav Spörer.[1]

The floor of this crater has been flooded with basaltic lava, leaving only a shallow rim above the surface. The narrow rim is roughly circular but irregular and broken in several locations. The rim has a slight outward bulge to the northwest. The interior of the crater is level and featureless.

Satellite craters

Sporer crater and its satellite craters taken from Earth in 2012 at the University of Hertfordshire's Bayfordbury Observatory with the telescopes Meade LX200 14" and Lumenera Skynyx 2-1

By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater midpoint that is closest to Spörer. Only one lettered satellite crater is founded and is located to the north and is known as Spörer A.

Spörer Latitude Longitude Diameter
A 3.4° S 2.1° W 5 km

Notes

  1. ^ "Spörer". Gazeteer of Planetary Nomenclature. International Astronomical Union. Retrieved 18 August 2017.

References