Henry Frères

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Henry Frères

(current IAU name; formerly Prosper Henry; and before that, part of Frères Henry)

Lat: 23.57°S, Long: 58.99°W, Diam: 41.7 km, Depth: 3.75 km, Rükl: 51

Table of Contents

[#Henry Frères Henry Frères]
[#Henry Frères-Images Images]
[#Henry Frères-Maps Maps]
[#Henry Frères-Description Description]
[#Henry Frères-Description-Wikipedia Wikipedia]
[#Henry Frères-Additional Information Additional Information]
[#Henry Frères-Nomenclature Nomenclature]
[#Henry Frères-Lettered Craters Lettered Craters]
[#Henry Frères-LROC Articles LROC Articles]
[#Henry Frères-LPOD Articles LPOD Articles]
[#Henry Frères-Bibliography Bibliography]

external image normal_Henry_Freres_LO-IV-161H_LTVT.JPG

M117880746MEwac.jpg

Left: LO-IV-161H.
Right: LROC WAC image (No. M117880746ME). Arrow points to the small crater within Henry Frères, which featured a boulder track in NAC M122597190L image.

Images

LPOD Photo Gallery Lunar Orbiter Images

Maps

(LAC zone 92B4) LAC map Geologic map

Description


Wikipedia

Henry Frères

Additional Information


Nomenclature

  • Jointly named for: Paul-Pierre Henry (1848-1905) and Mathieu-Prosper Henry (1849-1903); French astronomers. These brothers were noted pioneers in the field of astronomical photography. Their development of suitably designed and equipped telescopes made possible contemplation, in the late 1800's, of the hugely ambitious, international Cartes du Ciel project, to document, photographically, all the stars in the sky. In their day, the Henrys' lunar photographs, taken at the Paris Observatory, were much admired and are mentioned several times by Elger, even though they were soon overshadowed by the more systematic program of Loewy and Puiseux, at the same observatory. The Henry brothers were particularly noted for the joint nature of all their work, it being virtually impossible to distinguish which brother had contributed what in most of their many publications.
  • "Frères" means "brothers" in French, and Whitaker (p. 150) says the name Frères Henry was first introduced on a map published by Gaudibert in 1887. Gaudibert assigned the name to two similar and closely placed craters near the Moon's southwest limb -- the craters presently known as Henry Frères (eastern) and Henry (western). To facilitate indicating how they had been known in the past, the two craters were given separate entries (2177 and 2178 -- their Collated List numbers), joined by a bracket, in the original 1935 IAU catalog of Blagg and Müller, but in the accompanying south-up map the name Frères Henry was written across the two craters without distinction. Writing as late as 1958, Joseph Ashbrook, in his popular Sky and Telescope column, assumed this was still the proper name, and noted "this unusual joint nomenclature" of "a close pair of twin craters bearing a single name." Gerard Kuiper, in Table III of his Photographic Lunar Atlas, decided separate names would be more appropriate, so he dropped the joint nomenclature and declared that Collated List #2177 (the eastern crater and the present plain Henry) should henceforth be known as Paul Henry; while Collated List #2178 (the western crater and the present Henry Frères) should be known as Prosper Henry. This change was approved in IAU Transactions XIB (1961). The two craters were individually labeled (in this way) in the System of Lunar Craters (approved in 1964) and several newly-named lettered craters (not included in the original nomenclature) were assigned to either Prosper (on the west) or Paul (on the east), but not both. They are labeled in the same way on the slightly later LAC 92; and also in NASA SP-241 (published in 1971). Oddly, the list of changes at the rear of that book states that the crater labeled Paul Henry in that atlas (the present plain Henry) is an IAU approved change from the former name Freres, while the one labeled Prosper Henry (the present Henry Frères) is an IAU approved change from Henry. But the dates when these changes occurred are not specified, and it would seem that NASA SP-241 was not using the proper IAU notation as of the date of its publication. It appears that the change to the current system of the western crater being called Henry Frères (honoring both Paul and Prosper Henry), and the eastern crater being called plain Henry (honoring a completely different person -- 19th century American physicist Joseph Henry) was made in 1970 (and published in Menzel, 1971). But oddly, apparently through a misprint or an oversight, the coordinates of both newly-named craters were listed as 24S, 59W; making it difficult to know which crater was actually intended to have which name. At some time the lettered craters associated with Prosper Henry in the System of Lunar Craters were also reassigned to the new Henry Frères, while those formerly associated with Paul Henry were reassigned to the new plain Henry -- but no record of this can be found in the IAU Transactions. - JimMosher JimMosher
  • In Neison (p. 394), the present crater was known as "Cavendish C". Its eastern neighbor (the present Henry) was known as "Cavendish B". According to Blagg and Müller these names had been used earlier by Beer and Mädler. - JimMosher JimMosher
  • Paul Henry Delta (elevation north of both the Henry craters) (see Chart 78 in the Times Atlas of the Moon).


Lettered Craters

henry-freres-lettered.jpg
Excerpt from the USGS Digital Atlas of the Moon.

LROC Articles


LPOD Articles

Half the Henrys

Bibliography

  • Ashbrook, J. The brothers Henry and the Carte du Ciel. Sky and Telescope, June, 1958, p. 394. Reprinted in The Astronomical Scrapbook (Cambridge University Press, 1984), Ch. 81.
  • Both brothers Henry are mentioned on page 1880 of Burnham's Celestial Handbook (Volume 3), because they made the first photographs of the nebulosity in the star cluster known as the Pleiades (Messier 45 in Taurus). - DannyCaes DannyCaes Jul 4, 2015


A curiosity...
A certain M.M. Henry is mentioned on page 97 of T.W.Webb's Celestial Objects for Common Telescopes, Volume 1; The Solar System (chapter THE MOON). Who was this M.M. Henry? (according to T.W.Webb this person seems to have observed the moon through a large telescope at Paris).
This must have been Messieurs Henry (MM. Henry).
Sometimes... while reading about the moon (in T.W.Webb's) one should think French...
- DannyCaes DannyCaes Jul 4, 2015


Named Features -- Prev: Hendrix -- Next: Henry


This page has been edited 1 times. The last modification was made by - tychocrater tychocrater on Jun 13, 2009 3:24 pm - afx3u3