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Mersenius crater – wrinkles between Humorum and Procellarum
 
Mersenius crater
Mersenius crater
 
27 July 2006
This mosaic of three images, taken by the advanced Moon Imaging Experiment (AMIE) on board ESA's SMART-1 spacecraft, shows the crater Mersenius C on the Moon.
 
AMIE obtained this sequence on 13 January 2006, from a distance of 1149, 1172, 1195 kilometres from the surface, respectively. The ground resolution ranges from 104 to 108 metres per pixel. All images are located at a longitude of 45.7º West, at latitudes of 21.3º South, 19.7º South and 18.1º South, respectively.

Crater Mersenius C is positioned in the highland area between Mare Humorum and the Oceanus Procellarum. The crater has a diameter of 14 kilometres and is best visible for ground-based observers 4 days after first quarter Moon.  
 
It is named in honour of Marin Mersene, a French philosopher and physicist (1588 - 1648). The crater is surrounded by a system of so-called 'grabens', which are fractures that form when the lunar surface sinks slightly as a result of faults.

The crater is named in honour of Marin Mersenne, a French philosopher and physicist (1588-1648).
 
 
For more information
 
Bernard H. Foing, ESA SMART-1 Project Scientist
Email: bernard.foing @ esa.int

Jean-Luc Josset
AMIE Principal Investigator
SPACE-X Space Exploration Institute
Email: jean-luc.josset @ space-x.ch
 
 

 
 
SMART-1
More about...
Lomonosov – a large crater filled by lavaSMART-1 birthday postcard of Apollo 11 landing siteGruithuisen: non-mare volcanism in ProcellarumLandscapes from the ancient and eroded lunar far sideSMART-1 view of crater Sulpicius GallusThe SMART-1 way - giving the Moon some great new looksMare Humorum: where craters tell the story of basaltGassendi crater - clue on the thermal history of Mare HumorumKepler Crater as seen by SMART-1Lunar West Side Story - the SMART-1 MovieSMART-1 close-up on Zucchius crater's central peaksHighlands and Mare landscapes on the MoonSMART-1’s view of Crater Hopmann: on the shoulder of a giantSMART-1’s view of craters Mayer and BondTectonic ‘wrinkles’ in Crater De GasparisDark lava floor of crater Billy seen by SMART-1Crater Lichtenberg and young lunar basalts tracked by SMART-1
Related links
Space-XAdvanced Moon micro-Imager Experiment (AMIE)
 
 
 
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