Chawla

From The Moon
Jump to: navigation, search

Chawla

Lat: 42.8°S, Long: 147.5°W, Diam: 15 km, Depth: km, Rükl: (farside)

external image normal_chawla-large.jpg

chawla-color.jpg

Left: Clementine image from PDS Map-A-Planet. Right:Color-coded Lac 121 image from USGS Digital Atlas

Images

LPOD Photo Gallery Lunar Orbiter Images Apollo Images

Maps

(LAC zone 121D2) USGS Digital Atlas PDF

Description

Chawla lies just within the south-eastern rim of the Apollo Basin -- a 480 km-wide basin of the pre-Nectarian age (~ 4.6 to 3.92 bn years. The crater is at the centre of a trio of similarly-sized craters -- L.Clark and D. Brown -- that run longitudinallly across an un-named, highly impacted crater (particularly at its northern and eastern sectors) approximately 80 km in diameter. On closer inspection, Chawla's central region looks almost cone-like in nature, but the floor itself has been infilled by surrounding rim material, with an unusually, linearly-cut-like section towards the north-western sector -- probably due to the smaller crater that impacted at its north-west sector nearby. - JohnMoore2
This crater is one of a cluster of craters honoring the astronauts killed in the Columbia space shuttle accident of 2003.

Description: Wikipedia

Chawla

Additional Information


Nomenclature

Kalpana Chawla (March 17, 1962 – February 1, 2003), was an Indian-American scientist and a NASA astronaut. She was one of seven crewmembers killed in the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster.

LPOD Articles


Bibliography