Harpalus (crater)

Harpalus is a young lunar impact crater that lies on the Mare Frigoris, at the eastern edge of the Sinus Roris. To the southeast at the edge of the mare is the small crater Foucault, and to the northwest on the opposite edge is the walled plain named South.

Harpalus
Lunar Orbiter 4 image
(triangular mark below right of crater is blemish on original)
Coordinates52.6°N 43.4°W / 52.6; -43.4
Diameter39 km
Depth2.9 km
Colongitude44° at sunrise
EponymHarpalus

The rim of Harpalus is sharp-edged with little sign of wear or erosion. The wall is not perfectly circular, and has a few outward notches and protrusions, especially along the eastern half. It is surrounded by an outer rampart of ejecta, most notably towards the north, and is at the center of a small ray system. Due to its rays, Harpalus is mapped as part of the Copernican System.[1]

The inner surface is terraced, and flows down to the floor. The interior wall is the least wide along the northern face, making the floor slightly offset in that direction. Near the midpoint is a system of low central ridges.

Harpalus was the rocket landing site in the 1950s science fiction film Destination Moon. It was chosen by artist Chesley Bonestell as it had a relatively high latitude and the Earth could be realistically displayed at a low altitude during camera shots. However, the resulting clay model depicted crazing (net-like cracks) across the crater floor, an addition to which Bonestell objected.

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 Harpalus.

Harpalus Latitude Longitude Diameter
B 56.2° N 43.7° W 8 km
C 55.5° N 45.1° W 10 km
E 52.7° N 50.8° W 7 km
G 53.6° N 52.3° W 11 km
H 53.8° N 53.2° W 8 km
S 51.4° N 49.9° W 5 km
T 50.0° N 49.4° W 4 km
gollark: Well, if you extrapolate from current trends, probably JS will be gone and replaced with some even weirder thing.
gollark: ++delete communist revolutions
gollark: No communist revolutions!
gollark: Videos are sent uncompressed at "16k³", the marketing name for multi-layer transparent 16k displays which don't actually have 16000 layers.
gollark: 2050: JavaScript development is conducted entirely on Google gPhones™. Hello World imports over 2000 packages, one of which is deprecated per day. Types have now been deprecated and everything is implicitly converted based on a 1000-page spec nobody ever reads. Applications take up about 50GB of space each and use about half of a recent 60GHz carbon-nanotube ARMv18 CPU's processing power. Each browser tab uses 1TB of RAM, more if it's playing videos.

References

  1. The geologic history of the Moon, 1987, Wilhelms, Don E.; with sections by McCauley, John F.; Trask, Newell J. USGS Professional Paper: 1348. Plate 11: Copernican System (online)
  • Jalufka, Dona A.; Koeberl, Christian (1999). "Moonstruck: How Realistic Is The Moon Depicted In Classic Science Fiction Films?". Earth, Moon, and Planets. 85-86: 179–200. Bibcode:2001EM&P...85..179J. doi:10.1023/A:1017015931543.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.