Bullialdus

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Bullialdus - and its two companions (Bullialdus A and B)

Lat: 20.74°S, Long: 22.36°W, Diam: 60.72 km, Depth: 3.51 km, Rükl: 53, Upper Imbrian

external image normal_bullialdus.jpg

external image normal_Bullialdus-CLA-F20.jpg

external image normal_Bullialdus_AS16-119-19091.jpg

Left: LROC image WAC No. M120004880ME. Calibrated by LROC_WAC_Previewer.
Middle: CLA-F20 from LPOD Photo Gallery,
Right: AS16-119-19091

Images

LPOD Photo Gallery images Lunar Orbiter Images Apollo Images Wes Higgins

  • The so-called "causeway" across the shallow valley Bullialdus W (which is mentioned by Antonin Rukl on his Chart 53), is noticeable near the lower left corner of Lunar Orbiter 4's photograph LOIV-125-h2. It was also captured near the upper margin of Apollo 16's orbital color-Hasselblad frame AS16-119-19104.
  • Terrestrial telescopic color-photographs of Bullialdus, made during (or near) Full Moon, show a curious yellowish coloration at Bullialdus's central peak and floor. This curious color is noticeable in many photographs of this crater, such as the one by Michael Hunnekuhl, in the LPOD Spotted Moon.
    • Research LOIV and Apollo 16 photographs of the "causeway": Danny Caes


Maps

(LAC zone 94A3) LAC map Geologic map

Description


Elger

(IAU Directions) BULLIALDUS.--A noble object, 38 miles in diameter, forming with its surroundings by far the most notable formation on the surface of the Mare Nubium, and one of the most characteristic ring-plains on the moon. It should be observed about the time when the morning terminator lies on the E. border of the Mare Humorum, as at this phase the best view is obtained of the two deep parallel terrace valleys which run round the bright inner slope of the W. wall, of the crater-row against which they abut on the S.W., and of the massive E. glacis, with its spurs and depressions. The S. border of Bullialdus has been manifestly modified by the presence of the great ring-plain A, a deep irregular formation with linear walls, which is connected with it by a shallow valley. The rampart of Bullialdus rises about 8,000 feet above a concave floor, which sinks some 4,000 feet below the Mare on the W. With the exception of the fine compound central mountain, 3,000 feet high, there are few details in the interior. On the S., is the fine ring-plain B, connected with the S.W. wall near the crater-row by a well-marked valley, and nearly due W. of B is another, a square-shaped enclosure, C, with a very lofty little mountain on the W. side of it, and a crater on its S. wall. In addition to these features, there are many ridges and surface inequalities, very prominent under oblique illumination.

Wikipedia

Bullialdus

The yellowish/reddish coloration of the central peak of Bullialdus

This remarkable coloration is captured on the LROC's WAC albedo/color map, see close up of Bullialdus and environs: http://bit.ly/1CPZxT9

Additional Information

  • IAU page: Bullialdus
  • Depth data from Kurt Fisher database
    • Westfall, 2000: 3.51 km
    • Viscardy, 1985: 3.51 km
    • Cherrington, 1969: 3.44 km
  • Measurements of crater topography using Kaguya laser altimeter terrain profile graphs. - LunarJim LunarJim Oct 6, 2011
    • Crater Depth:Measurements on 4 axes separated by 45 degrees.
    • Zero reference level = Moon average radius.
    • Average floor level (average of lowest levels on 4 axes) = -4.72 km
    • Average rim height (average of 8 rim data points)= -1.50 km
    • Average crater depth (average rim height to average floor level) = 3.22 km
    • Deepest point on crater floor (from zero reference level) = -4.75 km
    • Max. crater depth (highest point on rim to deepest point on crater floor) = 3.48 km
    • Central Peak Height(above average floor level) = 0.8 km
  • Central peak height
  • Central peak composition: GNTA1, GNTA2, AN & N (Tompkins & Pieters, 1999)
  • West rim slope 46° (Pohn, 1963)
  • Stratigraphy changed to Upper Imbrian based on Galileo data and crater counts (McEwen et al, 1993)
  • Note the wonderfully impacted display (yellow box in the large image version below - click image) of lighter material from this WAC view showing a region northwest of Bullialdus B. Did a chunk from Tycho's (to the south-east) ejecta clip the rim; sending out material across the darker ejecta plain of Bullialdus crater?. There also is an additional feature to look out for here just south of Bullialdus crater itself (red box in larger version image), where upto five fingers of lighter-looking deposits (again, possibly due to ejecta material-chunks from Tycho crater) has directionally, and dynamically, aligned itself back to that crater. LROC images (WAC No.s (left image) M120004880ME and (right image) M117643256ME). Calibrated by LROC_WAC_Previewer- JohnMoore2 JohnMoore2
    bullialdus-bc-small.jpg
  • A certain Whitley discovered several chains of minute craters southeast of Bullialdus, see page 136 in T.W.Webb's Celestial Objects for Common Telescopes (Volume 1; The Solar System, chapter THE MOON). - DannyCaes Jul 11, 2015


Nomenclature

  • Named for Ismaël Boulliau (September 28, 1605 - November 25, 1694), a French priest, librarian and astronomer. Boulliau's name has apparently also (but incorrectly according to this 19th century French encyclopedia) been spelled Bouillaud. It is for his astronomical and mathematical works that Boulliau is best known. Among them in his Astronomia philolaica, published in 1645 and famous for the passage in which he proposed that the force of gravity follows an inverse-square law.
  • According to Whitaker (p. 211), the crater name, in the Latinized form Bullialdus, has continued unchanged since its original use on Riccioli's map.
  • Mary Blagg, in her Collated List (1913) noted that the feature name was spelled Bullialdus by Neison, 1876 and Schmidt, but Bulliald by Beer and Mädler (possibly a misprint in her catalog?).
  • Curiously, the name is printed and listed as Bouillaud on Sheet 2 of the Army Map Service's LTM series (prepared in 1963), which claims to adhere strictly to the then-current IAU nomenclature. Why the map makers thought the IAU name had been changed to this (incorrect) non-Latinized form is unclear. It does not seem to have been used in that way on any other maps of the period. - Jim Mosher
  • I have the 1935 IAU map and catalog where the name appears as Bullialdus; apparently the LTM list is not an error-free transcription. - tychocrater Aug 1, 2007
  • Why are there no officially recognized names for two pronounced craters south of Bullialdus? (still called Bullialdus A and Bullialdus B). - DannyCaes Apr 29, 2017


Lettered Craters

Bullialdus-nomenclature.jpg
Excerpt from the USGS Digital Atlas of the Moon.

LPOD Articles

Bullialdus' Ridge Clumps and Tadpoles Almost on the Ground Bully for Bullialdus Spotted Moon

Bibliography


Ismael Boulliau in the Sourcebook Project (William R. Corliss)

- Page 573 in Mysterious Universe, a handbook of astronomical anomalies (1979) :
  • The Temporary Stars (David E. Packer, Journal of the British Astronomical Association, 1894).



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