Difference between revisions of "Arago Domes"

From The Moon
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 27: Line 27:
 
==Additional Information==
 
==Additional Information==
  
* The positions of the domes listed in the title lines are based on [[LTVT|LTVT]] measurements of an Earth-based photo by Paolo Lazzarotti registered to the 1994 [[ULCN|ULCN]]. The height estimates are from the most recent [[GLR|GLR]] Lunar Dome Catalog (see below). The shadow cast by Arago Alpha in ''[[Consolidated%20Lunar%20Atlas|Consolidated Lunar Atlas]]'' plate D5 gives a height of ~300 m, in reasonable agreement with the GLR value. <span class="membersnap">- Jim Mosher</span>
+
* The positions of the domes listed in the title lines are based on [[LTVT|LTVT]] measurements of an Earth-based photo by Paolo Lazzarotti registered to the 1994 [[ULCN|ULCN]]. The height estimates are from the most recent [[GLR|GLR]] Lunar Dome Catalog (see below). The shadow cast by Arago Alpha in ''[[Consolidated%20Lunar%20Atlas|Consolidated Lunar Atlas]]'' plate D5 gives a height of ~300 m, in reasonable agreement with the GLR value. <span class="membersnap">- JimMosher</span>
 
* In his [http://www.lpod.org/cwm/DataStuff/Brungart-Domes/BrungartDomes.html 1964 Dome Catalog], Brungart listed '''Arago Alpha''' as "Arago 2", assigning it an "order of magnitude" height of 700 m, and listed '''Arago Beta''' as "Arago 1", assigning it a height of 800 m
 
* In his [http://www.lpod.org/cwm/DataStuff/Brungart-Domes/BrungartDomes.html 1964 Dome Catalog], Brungart listed '''Arago Alpha''' as "Arago 2", assigning it an "order of magnitude" height of 700 m, and listed '''Arago Beta''' as "Arago 1", assigning it a height of 800 m
 
* The [[domes|2005 GLR Lunar Dome Catalog]] agrees with the title line on the diameters, but gives the heights of '''Arago Alpha''' and '''Beta''' (which, like Brungart, it lists as Arago 2 and 1) as 150 m and 800 m, respectively. This appears to be an underestimate for '''Alpha''' and a considerable overestimate for '''Beta'''. The origin of the 150 m height for '''Arago Alpha''' is unclear.
 
* The [[domes|2005 GLR Lunar Dome Catalog]] agrees with the title line on the diameters, but gives the heights of '''Arago Alpha''' and '''Beta''' (which, like Brungart, it lists as Arago 2 and 1) as 150 m and 800 m, respectively. This appears to be an underestimate for '''Alpha''' and a considerable overestimate for '''Beta'''. The origin of the 150 m height for '''Arago Alpha''' is unclear.

Latest revision as of 19:59, 16 April 2018

Arago Domes

(discontinued IAU names)

Arago Alpha: Lat: 7.6°N, Long: 21.6°E, Diam: 24 km, Height: 0.33 km, Rükl: 35

Arago Beta: Lat: 6.1°N, Long: 20.0°E, Diam: 23 km, Height: 0.27 km, Rükl: 35

external image normal_061110_Arago_Domes_Low.jpg
George Tarsoudis

Images

LPOD|Photo Gallery images Lunar Orbiter Images

  • Arago Beta was very vaguely captured on Lunar Orbiter IV's photograph LOIV-85-H1. See the upper left corner of the Hi-Res scan of that photograph.- DannyCaes May 2, 2010


Topo Profiles

From LOLA Altimetry - see LPOD for details
Arago Alpha - W-E profile
Arago_Alpha_profile.jpg

Arago Beta- W-E profile
Arago_Beta_Profile.jpg

Arago Beta - S-N profile
Arago_Beta_profile_S-N.jpg

Maps

(LAC zone 60C1) LAC map Geologic map LM map AIC map -- alpha AIC map -- beta

Description


Description: Elger

(IAU Directions) There are two curious circular protuberances on the Mare W. of Arago, which are well seen when the E. longitude of the morning terminator is about 19 deg., and a long cleft, passing about midway between them, and extending from the foot of the W. wall to a small crater on the edge of the Mare near Sosigenes.

Description: Wikipedia

Arago

Additional Information

  • The positions of the domes listed in the title lines are based on LTVT measurements of an Earth-based photo by Paolo Lazzarotti registered to the 1994 ULCN. The height estimates are from the most recent GLR Lunar Dome Catalog (see below). The shadow cast by Arago Alpha in Consolidated Lunar Atlas plate D5 gives a height of ~300 m, in reasonable agreement with the GLR value. - JimMosher
  • In his 1964 Dome Catalog, Brungart listed Arago Alpha as "Arago 2", assigning it an "order of magnitude" height of 700 m, and listed Arago Beta as "Arago 1", assigning it a height of 800 m
  • The 2005 GLR Lunar Dome Catalog agrees with the title line on the diameters, but gives the heights of Arago Alpha and Beta (which, like Brungart, it lists as Arago 2 and 1) as 150 m and 800 m, respectively. This appears to be an underestimate for Alpha and a considerable overestimate for Beta. The origin of the 150 m height for Arago Alpha is unclear.
  • A 2005 article by Lena et al. (see Bibliography, below), appearing simultaneously with the announcement of the 2005 GLR Lunar Dome Catalog, gives height estimates based on shape-from-shading/photoinclinometry of 330+/-30 m and 270+/-30 m.
  • These numbers are repeated in the 2006 Icarus article by the same group (see below), where the features are assigned the new names "A2" (Arago Alpha) and "A3" (Arago Beta).
  • The current GLR Consolidated Lunar Dome Catalogue reproduces the information from the Icarus article, giving the heights as 330 m (A2 = Arago Alpha) and 270 m (A3 = Arago Beta).
  • North-northwest of the large dome Arago Alpha is (or should be) the impact location of Ranger 6, which was an unsuccessful attempt to make close-up photographs of the moon while the probe descended toward the lunar surface.
    The exact coordinates of Ranger 6's impact location are: 9°24' North/ 21°30' East.
    Note that chart 35 of Antonin Rukl's Atlas of the Moon doesn't show the location of Ranger 6.
    Additional research Danny Caes


Nomenclature

  • Named for nearby crater. (Arago)
  • Alpha and Beta are Greek-letter designations for lunar peaks, no longer recognized by the IAU


LPOD Articles

Something for everyone
Edgy
May Day Dome
Domical Profiles

Lunar 100

L32: Volcanic domes.

Bibliography