Biot

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Biot

Lat: 22.6°S, Long: 51.1°E, Diam: 12 km, Depth: 0.9 km, Rükl: 59

Table of Contents

[#Biot Biot]
[#Biot-Images Images]
[#Biot-Maps Maps]
[#Biot-Description Description]
[#Biot-Description: Elger Description: Elger]
[#Biot-Description: Wikipedia Description: Wikipedia]
[#Biot-Additional Information Additional Information]
[#Biot-L.F.Ball's straight rille L.F.Ball's straight rille]
[#Biot-Nomenclature Nomenclature]
[#Biot-LPOD Articles LPOD Articles]
[#Biot-Bibliography Bibliography]
[#Biot-Jean-Baptiste Biot in the Sourcebook Project (William R. Corliss) Jean-Baptiste Biot in the Sourcebook Project (William R. Corliss)]
external image normal_Biot_LO-IV-160H_LTVT.JPG
LO-IV-160H Biot is at the bottom. The 8-km diameter crater above it is Biot C.

Images

LPOD Photo Gallery Lunar Orbiter Images Apollo Images
High albedo crater Biot was photographed by the orbital Mapping/Metric Fairchild camera of Apollo 15. Biot was captured on several oblique south looking frames, of which frame AS15-M-2531 shows Biot's appearance as a bright "streak" near the central part of the curved horizon.
Research Danny Caes

Maps

(LAC zone 98A4) LAC map Geologic map

IAU page: Biot

Description


Description: Elger

(IAU Directions) BIOT.--A brilliant little ring-plain, scarcely more than 7 miles in diameter, standing in an isolated position in the Mare Fecunditatis N.W. of Wrottesley. There is a number of bright streaks in its neighbourhood; and a few miles W. of it, in the hilly region E. of Santbech, another conspicuous crater of about the same size.

Description: Wikipedia

Biot

Additional Information


L.F.Ball's straight rille

  • Harold Hill, in his wonderful book A Portfolio of Lunar Drawings, describes earlier observations by L.F.Ball, R.Barker, and H.P.Wilkins, of an alleged straight rille running from the southern part of Biot's rim to the ridges southward of Wrottesley. Something which he (H.Hill) was unable to confirm.


Nomenclature

  • Named for Jean-Baptiste Biot (1774-1862), a French astronomer.
  • According to Gunther P. Konnen (Polarized Light in Nature), Biot seems to have been the first one who discovered the polarization of the rainbow (around 1811). - DannyCaes DannyCaes Apr 20, 2014
  • Biot is Catalog number 4396 in the Collated List and the original IAU nomenclature of Named Lunar Formations. The name is said to have originated in Beer and Mädler.
  • Biot Beta (the pronounced mountain-like mass east-northeast of Biot, northwest of Wrottesley) (see Chart 87 in the Times Atlas of the Moon).
  • This rather pronounced island (Biot Beta) seems to have been unknown (?) during the making of SLC map A6 (System of Lunar Craters, 1966).


LPOD Articles


Bibliography

Hill, Harold. A Portfolio of Lunar Drawings, pages 216, 217, 218.

Jean-Baptiste Biot in the Sourcebook Project (William R. Corliss)

- Page 570 in Mysterious Universe, a handbook of astronomical anomalies (1979) :
  • The Temporary Stars (David E. Packer, Journal of the British Astronomical Association, 1894).

This page has been edited 1 times. The last modification was made by - tychocrater tychocrater on Jun 13, 2009 3:24 pm - afx3u2