Mendel-Rydberg Basin

Mendel-Rydberg Basin

Oblique Lunar Orbiter 4 image, with the approximate extent of the basin highlighted in red
Coordinates 50°00′S 94°00′W / 50.0°S 094.0°W / -50.0; -094.0Coordinates: 50°00′S 94°00′W / 50.0°S 094.0°W / -50.0; -094.0
Diameter 630 km[1]
Eponym Mendel and Rydberg craters

The Mendel-Ryberg Basin is a Nectarian impact basin on the southwestern limb of the moon.[2] It is named after the crater Mendel on the west margin and the smaller crater Rydberg north of the center of the basin. The basin is due south of the larger, younger Orientale basin, and ejecta and other geomorphological effects from the younger basin have overprinted the older one.

At the center is a mass concentration (mascon), or gravitational high. The mascon was first identified by Doppler tracking of the Lunar Prospector spacecraft.[3]

Other craters within the basin include Guthnick, De Roy, Arrhenius, Yakovkin, Graff, Andersson, Chadwick, Fényi, Blanchard, and Baade. Vallis Baade cuts tangentially across the northeast rim of the basin. Nearby craters just outside the outer rim include Drude, Chant, Steklov, Lippmann, Petzval, Chappe, Pilâtre, Hausen, Pingré, and Inghirami. The large crater Bailly is to the southeast, and to the west beyond Lippmann is the South Pole-Aitken Basin.

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. (online)
  2. Impact Basin Database
  3. A. S. Konopliv; A. B. Binder; L. L. Hood; A. B. Kucinskas; W. L. Sjogren & J. G. Williams (1998). "Improved Gravity Field of the Moon from Lunar Prospector". Science. 281 (5382): 1476–1480. doi:10.1126/science.281.5382.1476.
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