Hertzsprung

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Hertzsprung Basin

(unofficial name; IAU crater name: Hertzsprung; 591 km diam)

Lat: 2.6°N, Long: 129.2°W, Main ring diam: 570 km, Basin depth: 4.5-5.3 km, Rükl: (farside)
external image normal_hertzsprung-lo-v_026_h3.jpgexternal image normal_Hertzsprung_Basin_LIDAR_LTVT.JPGHertzprung.jpg
Left: Lunar Orbiter V M26, Middle: Clementine, Clementine LIDAR Altimeter texture from PDS Map-a-Planet remapped to north-up aerial view by LTVT. The dot is the center position and the white circle the main ring position from Chuck Wood's Impact Basin Database. Grid spacing = 10 degrees.
Right: LROC

Images

LPOD Photo Gallery Lunar Orbiter Images

  • There are no orbital Apollo photographs of Hertzsprung. During each one of the Apollo missions, this area was in complete darkness (no sunlight, and... no Earthshine because Hertzsprung is a farside formation!). The antipodal region of Hertzsprung (Mare Fecunditatis) was always in full sunlight, which is the reason why the antipode of Hertzsprung was one of the most frequently photographed regions on the entire moon! We could call the Hertzsprung part of the moon "Apollo's dark and unphotographed region". Research: Danny Caes
  • Hertzsprung's western part is noticeable near the left margin of ZOND 6's photograph of Vavilov, see: Frame 3c. Research: Danny Caes
  • Hertzsprung is also depicted in ZOND 6's Frame 4. Hertzsprung's location is a little bit below and to the left of the black cross near the curved limb. Research: Danny Caes


Maps

(LAC zone 71D4) USGS Digital Atlas PDF

Basin Classification

(description of terms and most numeric basin data from Wood, C.A. (2004) Impact Basin Database)
Certainty of Existence
USGS Age
Wilhelms Age Group
Ring Diameters
Mare Thickness
Mascon
Certain
Nectarian
11
150, 255, 380, 570 km
1.3 km
Yes, -45 mg gravity anomaly


Description

This is a multi-ring impact basin with four rings with diameters of 150, 255, 380 and 570 km. It is a Nectarian age mascon basin with a -45 mg anomaly.

Description: Wikipedia

Hertzsprung

Additional Information

  • An alternative depth of 4.5 km and a rim height of 1.06 km were given by Spudis & Adkins, 1996 (LPSC).
  • Mg-suite plutons exposed on basin floor: Shearer and Neal.


Nomenclature

  • The IAU crater name honors Ejnar Hertzsprung (October 8, 1873, Copenhagen – October 21, 1967, Roskilde), a Danish chemist and astronomer. In the period 1911-1913 with Henry Norris Russell, he developed the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. In 1913 he determined the distances to several Galactic Cepheid stars by statistical parallax, and was thus able to calibrate the relationship discovered by Henrietta Leavitt between Cepheid period and luminosity. In this determination he made a mistake, possibly a slip of the pen, putting the stars 10 times too close. He used this relationship to estimate the distance to the Small Magellanic Cloud.
  • The impact basin is named after the crater.
  • Hertzsprung was among the long list of farside names approved by the IAU in 1970 and published in Menzel, 1971.
  • In the planning for Apollo 8, the first manned circumlunar mission (1968), this crater (which did not then have an official name) was referred to informally as Gilruth (source: Phil Stooke's LPOD).
  • The name Wien (N° 156) was proprosed for Hertzsprung D (a crater southwest of Michelson in the Hertzsprung basin) on the Complete Map of the Moon (1967/1969) made under the direction of the Sternberg Institute. Hertzsprung itself (or possibly just the area enclosed by the innermost ring?) was given the provisional name Kibal'chich. That name was later adopted by the IAU for a different crater nearby. Research: Danny Caes.
  • Three chain-like formations in and near the basin Hertzsprung were once called GDL (Catena Leuschner), GIRD (Catena Michelson), and RNII (Catena Lucretius) on the Complete Map of the Moon (1967/1969) made under the direction of the Sternberg Institute. These three chain-like formations are all related to the basin Mare Orientale (southeast of Hertzsprung). The southern two of the three chains (GIRD and RNII) are depicted and named on this part of the above mentioned map (at location K-6). Research: Danny Caes


The Hertzberg basin?

Only the book The Farside of the Moon; a Photographic Guide from Charles J. Byrne (Springer 2008) knows a certain basin on the farside of the moon called the "Hertzberg Basin". See page 147 of that book.- DannyCaes Dec 9, 2017

LPOD Articles

Ranger 4 impact

LROC Articles

Thin Dark Layer (the rim of an unnamed young ray-craterlet on the southern part of Hertzsprung).

Bibliography


Ejnar Hertzsprung in the Sourcebook Project (William R. Corliss)

  • A Peculiar Celestial Apparition (in the constellation Camelopardalis) (Journal of the British Astronomical Association, 1927), in: Mysterious Universe, a handbook of astronomical anomalies (1979), page 522.