Herschel (Mimantean crater)

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Herschel (Template:IPAc-en) is the largest impact crater on the Saturnian moon Mimas. It is located on Mimas's leading hemisphere, centered on the equator at 112° longitude. It is named after the 18th-century astronomer William Herschel, who discovered Mimas in 1789.

Geology

Template:Multiple image Herschel is the second-largest crater relative to its parent body of any equilibrium planetary moon in the Solar System after Tethys's crater Odysseus.<ref>Craters on small moons such as Stickney may be comparably large [1]; the moons of dwarf planets have not been imaged.</ref> It is so large that astronomers have expressed surprise that Mimas was not shattered by the impact that caused it. It measures Template:Convert<ref name=gpn/> across, almost one third the diameter of Mimas. Its walls are approximately Template:Convert high,<ref name = "Goddard"/> parts of its floor are Template:Convert deep, and its central peak rises Template:Convert above the crater floor.<ref name="Moore Schenk et al. 2004"/>

Origin

The impact that formed Herschel must have nearly disrupted Mimas entirely. Large chasms (termed chasmata) that may be stress fractures due to shock waves from the impact traveling through it and focusing there can be seen on the opposite side of Mimas. The impact is also suspected of having something to do with the current "Pac-Man"–shaped temperature pattern on Mimas.<ref name = "Goddard"/> Herschel has an estimated age of around 4.1 billion years.<ref name = "Schmedemann2011"/>

Media reception

The similarity between Mimas's appearance and the Death Star in Star Wars due to the large size of Herschel has often been noted, both in the press and in NASA/JPL press releases.<ref name="fas"/><ref name="PIA12570"/> This is a coincidence, however, as the crater's similarities were not discovered until 1980 when Voyager 1 gained line of sight, three years after the film was made.<ref NAME="DN6999"/>

See also

References

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