Babcock (crater)

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox Lunar crater

File:Babcock crater AS11-41-6012.jpg
Oblique view of Babcock, facing west, with Mare Smythii in upper left, from Apollo 11

Babcock is a lunar impact crater that is located on the far side of the Moon. It was named by the IAU in 1970, after American astronomer Harold D. Babcock.<ref>Template:Gpn</ref> It lies on the northeastern edge of Mare Smythii, to the southeast of Mare Marginis. To the south of Babcock is the crater Purkynĕ, and to the east-northeast lies Erro. Babcock is located in a region of the Moon's surface that is occasionally brought into view during favorable librations, although it is seen from the edge and so little detail can be discerned from an observer on the Earth.

File:Babcock crater.jpg
LRO image

The rim of Babcock has been eroded, notched and modified by subsequent impacts, leaving a somewhat irregular and uneven outer rim.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The interior has been resurfaced by lava flows, and is relatively flat. In place of a central peak, a small crater lies very close to the crater midpoint. This crater has been designated Zasyadko. A smaller crater lies on the interior near the northern edge.

The area about Babcock has been subject to past inundations by basaltic lava flows, leaving the surface relatively flat and the remnants of ghost craters visible as curved ridges in the ground.

Satellite craters

By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater midpoint that is closest to Babcock.

Babcock Latitude Longitude Diameter
H 3.0° N 96.5° E 63 km
K 1.2° N 95.2° E 10 km

References

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