Australian Sky & Telescope — July 2017

(Wang) #1

58 AUSTRALIAN SKY & TELESCOPE July 2017


Take a telescopic tour of 4 billion years of Solar System history.


EVERY MONTH WE WATCH THE MOONmorph
throughitssequenceofphases—fromnewtofulland
back to new. During this 29½-day-long cycle, our satellite
orbits around Earth, and we see its disk become sunlit from
different angles. Day by day, the line that divides lunar day
and night, called the terminator, gradually marches across the
Moon’s face.
And what an interesting face it has! Over time we’ve come NASA GODDARD / ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY

amazing Moon features


to appreciate that the lunar surface preserves geologic events
that occurred throughout the Solar System’s 4½-billion-year
history. And guess what? You can see much of that evidence
easily with even a small telescope. So here’s a list of 25 lunar
features of all types that you can track down at your leisure.
Use the map above to locate them; they’re ordered from lunar
east to west, so you can start looking for them soon after new
Moon and continue until full Moon and thereafter.

FEATURES APLENTY
This composite of Lunar
Reconnaissance Orbiter images reveals
the Moon’s varied surface features.

li i

ili

Tc

J

Serpentine Ridge Reiner Gamma

Fra Mauro

Schiller

Proclus

Altai Scarp

si i

i ir

r

II

I

ri

I
II

i

ter s

NE MT
PENNINE MT

lin
valley
Alpine
Valley

lli

3

4

2

7

12

11

10

17

23

18

24

19

20

25

15

16

LUNAR SHOWCASE

9

M^8
MAARREE FFRRIIGGOORRIISS

25

Free download pdf