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bruce+crater Latitude and Longitude:

1°06′N 0°24′E / 1.1°N 0.4°E / 1.1; 0.4
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bruce
Lunar Orbiter 4 image
(White blemish is present on original image)
Coordinates 1°06′N 0°24′E / 1.1°N 0.4°E / 1.1; 0.4
Diameter6.7 km
Depth1.3 km
Colongitude0° at sunrise
Eponym Catherine W. Bruce
View facing west from Lunar Orbiter 3
Oblique view facing west with Bruce at center and Blagg below center, from Apollo 10

Bruce is a small lunar impact crater located in the small lunar mare Sinus Medii. It lies to the west-northwest of the irregular crater Rhaeticus, and is about 33 km to the west of the even smaller Blagg. It is named for Catherine Wolfe Bruce, an American philanthropist and patroness of astronomy. [1]

This feature is circular and cup-shaped, with no notable impacts overlaying the rim or interior. The interior has a generally higher albedo than the surrounding terrain, but there is a band of darker material cross the midpoint of the crater from west to east. It is surrounded by lunar mare, with a few tiny craterlets in the surface to the east.

Less than forty kilometres to the southeast is the original point of the selenographic coordinate system. From the floor of this crater the Earth always appears at the zenith. Both the Surveyor 4 and Surveyor 6 probes landed about 50 km to the southwest of Bruce.

References

  1. ^ "Bruce". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS. October 18, 2010. Retrieved 2017-06-14.

External links


bruce+crater Latitude and Longitude:

1°06′N 0°24′E / 1.1°N 0.4°E / 1.1; 0.4
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bruce
Lunar Orbiter 4 image
(White blemish is present on original image)
Coordinates 1°06′N 0°24′E / 1.1°N 0.4°E / 1.1; 0.4
Diameter6.7 km
Depth1.3 km
Colongitude0° at sunrise
Eponym Catherine W. Bruce
View facing west from Lunar Orbiter 3
Oblique view facing west with Bruce at center and Blagg below center, from Apollo 10

Bruce is a small lunar impact crater located in the small lunar mare Sinus Medii. It lies to the west-northwest of the irregular crater Rhaeticus, and is about 33 km to the west of the even smaller Blagg. It is named for Catherine Wolfe Bruce, an American philanthropist and patroness of astronomy. [1]

This feature is circular and cup-shaped, with no notable impacts overlaying the rim or interior. The interior has a generally higher albedo than the surrounding terrain, but there is a band of darker material cross the midpoint of the crater from west to east. It is surrounded by lunar mare, with a few tiny craterlets in the surface to the east.

Less than forty kilometres to the southeast is the original point of the selenographic coordinate system. From the floor of this crater the Earth always appears at the zenith. Both the Surveyor 4 and Surveyor 6 probes landed about 50 km to the southwest of Bruce.

References

  1. ^ "Bruce". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS. October 18, 2010. Retrieved 2017-06-14.

External links


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