Ingalls
Contents
Ingalls
Lat: 26.4°N, Long: 153.1°W, Diam: 37 km, Depth: km, Rükl: (farside) |
LROC image WAC No. M118499338ME. Calibrated by LROC_WAC_Previewer.
Images
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Maps
(LAC zone 51B3) USGS Digital Atlas PDF
IAU page
Description
Description: Wikipedia
Additional Information
Nomenclature
- Named for Albert Graham Ingalls (1888-1958), described by the IAU as an "American optician." He is best remembered for hosting the "The Back Yard Astronomer"/"Amateur Scientist" feature in Scientific American from 1928-1955, and for editing the related three-volume Amateur Telescope Making book series.
- A crater at (or near) the IAU's Ingalls seems to have been called Morehouse (N° 536) on the Shternberg Astronomy Institute's Second Complete Moon Map - 1969. Research: Danny Caes.
- Ingalls was once H.P.Wilkins's name for Riccioli C.
- What appears to be an officially unnamed chaotic-looking large depression southwest of Ingalls (east of Mineur) looks like a smooth-floored unit on Hans Schwarzenbach's Hallwag-map of the moon's far side. - DannyCaes Feb 12, 2012
Lettered craters
Left: Mosaic of LACs 51 and 52 - excerpt from the USGS Digital Atlas of the Moon.
Right: LROC WAC images of the lettered craters - (top-left) M118512927ME, (top-right) M118499338ME, (bottom-left) M118499338ME, (bottom-right) M118478987ME. All four images calibrated by LROC_WAC_Previewer (click each for larger views).
LPOD Articles
Bibliography
Albert G. Ingalls in the Sourcebook Project:
- Guns of Seneca Lake (Science, 1934) (Explosive Sounds Heard along Seacoasts and near Large Bodies of Water), see: Earthquakes, Tides, Unidentified Sounds, and related phenomena (William R. Corliss, The Sourcebook Project, 1983).