Difference between revisions of "Wargo"

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[[Image:Wargo.jpg|Wargo.jpg]]<br />  
 
[[Image:Wargo.jpg|Wargo.jpg]]<br />  
* Image<span class="membersnap">- [http://www.wikispaces.com/user/view/JohnMoore2 [[Image:JohnMoore2-lg.jpg|16px|JohnMoore2]]] [http://www.wikispaces.com/user/view/JohnMoore2 JohnMoore2]</span> The much larger crater east of '''Wargo''' is '''[[Joule|Joule]] T'''.
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* Image<span class="membersnap">- JohnMoore2</span> The much larger crater east of '''Wargo''' is '''[[Joule|Joule]] T'''.
 
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==Images==
 
==Images==

Latest revision as of 21:45, 16 April 2018

Wargo

Lat: 27.68°N, Long: 148.62°W, Diam: 13.9 km, Height: km

Wargo.jpg

  • Image- JohnMoore2 The much larger crater east of Wargo is Joule T.


Images


Maps

LAC zone (near the upper left corner of LAC 52)

Description

  • Bowl-shaped high albedo crater on the western part of Joule T's rim. On page 104 (LAC 52) of the Clementine Atlas of the Moon (Bussey / Spudis) this high-albedo region (both Wargo and Joule T) shows up as a white spot without much interior details. - DannyCaes Jul 27, 2017


Description: Wikipedia


Additional Information

  • Wargo was officially named by the IAU on 25 July 2017
  • An investigation of the High Resolution NAC close-ups of Wargo and its much larger eastern neighbour Joule T in the online LROC Act-React Quick Map reveals all sorts of weird surface formations up there. I wonder if this might have been the reason to give that rather small bowl-shaped crater its own official IAU name. According to the rules of the IAU there's always some sort of scientific reason...- DannyCaes Jul 27, 2017


Nomenclature


LPOD Articles


LROC Articles


Bibliography