Hell (crater)

Hell is a lunar crater in the south of the Moon's near side, within the western half of the enormous walled plain Deslandres. To the southeast, also within Deslandres, is the larger crater Lexell, and about 9° to the south lies the prominent Tycho crater.[2] The crater received its name in 1935 after the Hungarian astronomer and ordained Jesuit priest Maximilian Hell.[3] It has 19 satellite craters with diameters ranging between about 3 and 22 km. Nearly all Hell craters are relatively flat and shallow, with a sharp, well-defined rim and a typical diameter-to-depth ratio of about 10.

Hell
Coordinates32.43°S 7.85°W / -32.43; -7.85
Diameter32.55 km
Depth2.2 km[1]
Colongitude8° at sunrise
EponymMaximilian Hell

Description

Hell is somewhat circular but with an outward bulge along the western rim. The interior floor is rolling and uneven, with several hills and a central peak about 1 km tall.[4][5] The sharp-edged rim is not significantly eroded, and has a narrow inner wall; it is 2–3 times higher on the north-west than on the east where it rises by about 820 meters.[6]

Satellite craters

Hell[2] Latitude Longitude Diameter, km Depth, km
A 33.91° S 8.51° W 20.3
B 30.04° S 5.87° W 21.55 0.63[7]
C 34.11° S 6.59° W 13.96
E 34.64° S 6.59° W 9.32
H 31.75° S 3.9° W 4.87 0.41[1]
J 29.7° S 6.96° W 5.19
K 34.11° S 5.4° W 4.82
L 30.68° S 4.79° W 5.33 0.38[1]
M 30.36° S 4.82° W 8.15 0.5[1]
N 30.07° S 5.07° W 3.45
P 32.56° S 5.85° W 3.42
Q 33.0° S 4.55° W 3.75
R 32.73° S 6.66° W 3.02
S 33.54° S 6.36° W 3.73
T 33.71° S 7.13° W 5.12
U 33.42° S 9.28° W 4.21 0.54[8]
V 32.82° S 8.88° W 7.16
W 32.54° S 8.73° W 7.87
X 31.98° S 9.27° W 4.23

Nineteen satellite craters were found near Hell. Whereas many of them were described in the 19th century,[6] their naming was officially recognized by the IAU only in 2006. They are labeled by capital Latin letters following the nomenclature established by Johann Heinrich von Mädler in the 1820s.[9] However, their order is not systematic, either by diameter, by distance from the central crater or by the azimuthal angle, as agreed for some other lunar craters. Their shape is similar to that of the main crater, with nearly flat bottom, nearly round shape and a distinct thin rim. Hell A, B and C – the largest satellites – have one irregularity in the rim for each crater, facing south-west, north-west and south, respectively. Whereas most Hell satellites are separated from one another, Hell L and M merge forming an elongated shape. The rim is rather diffuse in Hell T, V and W and could have been smoothened by the ejecta of the main Hell crater.[2][8][10] Letters I and O are omitted in the modern nomenclature, in order to keep the number of available symbols 24, that is equal to the number of azimuthal sectors (clock system).[11] However, the reason for lacking Hell D, F, G is uncertain. Hell Q has two sub-satellites, 7 and 8 o'clock from it. These three craters, all of similar size, were sometimes referred to as Q, QA and QB, but only one was recognized by the IAU in 2006, and named Hell Q.[12] It is a relatively recent crater with the age estimated as younger than that of Tycho, that is younger than about 108 million years.[13]

History and etymology

The crater was named after the Hungarian astronomer and an ordained Jesuit priest Maximilian Hell (1720–1792). The name was first given by Johann Hieronymus Schröter to the entire plane, Hell plane, which is now known as Deslandres, but Mädler reassigned it to the crater.[4][14] It was officially recognized by Mary Adela Blagg and Karl Müller in the first official version of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) nomenclature for lunar features in 1935.[2][3][15] Hell B was previously known as Schupmann and Hell Q as Cassini's Bright Spot.[4]

References

  1. Moutsoulas, M. & Preka, P. (1980). "Morphological characteristics of lunar craters with small depth/diameter ratio. II". Moon and the Planets. 23: 113–126, 122. Bibcode:1980M&P....23..113M. doi:10.1007/BF00897584.
  2. Hell, The Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature, USGS Astrogeology Science Center
  3. Mordechai Feingold History of Universities, Volume 24, Oxford University Press, 2010, ISBN 0-19-958212-2 p. 184
  4. Hell, May 24, 2010
  5. Naosuke Sekiguchi, 1972. Catalogue of Central Peaks and Floor Objects of the Lunar Craters on the Visible Hemisphere. University of Tokyo Press and University Park Press ISBN 0-8391-0649-1
  6. Edmund Neville Nevill The moon, and the condition and configurations of its surface, Longmans, Green, and Co., 1876, p. 371
  7. Moutsoulas, M. & Preka, P. (1979). "Morphological characteristics of lunar craters with small depth/diameter ratio. I". Moon and the Planets. 21 (3): 299–305. Bibcode:1979M&P....21..299M. doi:10.1007/BF00897358.
  8. Moutsoulas, M. & Preka, P. (1981). "Morphological characteristics of lunar craters with moderate depth/diameter ratio I. /0.08 is less than d/D is less than 0.12/". Moon and the Planets. 25 (1): 51–66, 62. Bibcode:1981M&P....25...51M. doi:10.1007/BF00911808.
  9. Ronald Greeley Planetary Mapping, Cambridge University Press, 2007 ISBN 052103373X, p. 97
  10. LAC 95 map, The Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature, USGS Astrogeology Science Center
  11. Ewen A. Whitaker Mapping and Naming the Moon: A History of Lunar Cartography and Nomenclature, Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-521-54414-9 p. 184
  12. Hell Q
  13. McEwen; et al. (1992). "Lunar Craters and Soils: Ages, Colors, and Regolith Thicknesses". Abstracts of the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. 23: 879. Bibcode:1992LPI....23..879M.
  14. Ewen A. Whitaker Mapping and Naming the Moon: A History of Lunar Cartography and Nomenclature, Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-521-54414-9, pp. 123, 218
  15. Mary Adela Blagg, William Henry Wesley Named lunar formations, Volume 1, P. Lund, Humphries, 1935
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.