Poincaré

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Poincaré Basin

(unofficial name; IAU crater name: Poincaré; 319 km diam)

Lat: 56.7°S, Long: 163.6°E, Main ring diam: 325 km, Depth: km, Rükl: (farside)

external image normal_poincare-clem1.jpg

external image normal_Poincare-Basin_LIDAR_LTVT_Pike-Spudis_rings.JPG

Left: Clementine, Right: 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 red circle the main ring position from Chuck Wood's Impact Basin Database. The white circle indicates the location of the 160 km inner ring, which encircles the central mare in the Clementine view.

Table of Contents

[#Poincaré Basin Poincaré Basin]
[#Poincaré Basin-Images Images]
[#Poincaré Basin-Maps Maps]
[#Poincaré Basin-Basin Classification Basin Classification]
[#Poincaré Basin-Description Description]
[#Poincaré Basin-Description: Wikipedia Description: Wikipedia]
[#Poincaré Basin-Additional Information Additional Information]
[#Poincaré Basin-Nomenclature Nomenclature]
[#Poincaré Basin-LPOD Articles LPOD Articles]
[#Poincaré Basin-Bibliography Bibliography]

Images

LPOD Photo Gallery Lunar Orbiter Images Apollo Images

Maps

(LAC zone 132D1) 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
Pre-Nectarian
4
160, 325 km



Description


Description: Wikipedia

Poincaré

Additional Information

  • Mare area of 23,750 km^2 according to measurements by Jim Whitford-Stark.
  • Crater counts yield mare ages of 3.17 b.y. (S side), 3.47 (NW side), and 3.13 and 3.52 b.y. (E side), evidence of multiple periods of volcanism. Haruyama, J. and others, 2008.
  • One of three basins with crustal thickness less than 5 km. The Crust of the Moon as Seen by Grail by Wieczorek et al (2013).
  • Atypical exposure of olivine-rich material - from mantle? - surrounding this basin. Yamamoto et al (2010) Nat. Geosci. 3, 533.
  • Possible Concentric Crater at (approximately) 158° East, 61° South (LAC 131, near the southwestern part of Poincaré's rim). - DannyCaes DannyCaes Aug 20, 2014
  • Two craters within Poincaré's east - Poincaré E and Poincaré F - were adopted into the lunar nomenclature by the IAU on 25 Feb 2016 (see image below).

Poincare-EF.jpg


Nomenclature

  • The IAU crater name honors Jules Henri Poincaré (April 29, 1854 – July 17, 1912) one of France's greatest mathematicians and theoretical physicists, and a philosopher of science. Poincaré is often described as a polymath, and in mathematics as 'The Last Universalist', since he excelled in all fields of the discipline as it existed during his lifetime. Poincaré was the 1911 Bruce Medalist of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, and extensive links to information about him can be found there.
  • The name Poincaré (for the crater) was introduced into the IAU nomenclature in the long list of farside names published in Menzel, 1971.
  • The impact basin is named after the crater.
  • Rima Poincaré Z (an unofficial name from D.Caes for the sinuous rille north of Poincaré Z). http://bit.ly/2EXDe4O
  • Officially unnamed (not lettered) large crater with smaller (also unnamed) companion west-southwest of it, both of them located between Abbe M and Poincaré F and poincaré J, see: http://bit.ly/2EgbefV


LPOD Articles

A Basin to Study

Bibliography




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