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The Mars crater is 3.1 times the D (& thus abt 9.4 times the area), on a body that has abt 4 times the area: 2.3 times the share of the respective bodies' surface areas.
But at 250 times the distance from astronomers, its apparent diameter is 1.2% of the lunar one, reducing the detail that can be see accordingly, and the number who can personally view it still more drastically; i think this factor is more pertinent to its WP significance.
Thus i would move the
accompanying article to
Lambert (crater) (in place of the existing Dab) and give it a HatNote Dab directing to
the single pertinent line in the table at
List of craters on Mars, which is especially desirable since the practice of using a suffixed title on a Dab page (viz.,
Lambert (crater)) can lead to that Dab being turned into a Rdr to a larger Dab (viz.,
Lambert).
--
Jerzy•
t 06:15, 5 February 2009 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||
|
The Mars crater is 3.1 times the D (& thus abt 9.4 times the area), on a body that has abt 4 times the area: 2.3 times the share of the respective bodies' surface areas.
But at 250 times the distance from astronomers, its apparent diameter is 1.2% of the lunar one, reducing the detail that can be see accordingly, and the number who can personally view it still more drastically; i think this factor is more pertinent to its WP significance.
Thus i would move the
accompanying article to
Lambert (crater) (in place of the existing Dab) and give it a HatNote Dab directing to
the single pertinent line in the table at
List of craters on Mars, which is especially desirable since the practice of using a suffixed title on a Dab page (viz.,
Lambert (crater)) can lead to that Dab being turned into a Rdr to a larger Dab (viz.,
Lambert).
--
Jerzy•
t 06:15, 5 February 2009 (UTC)