A crater chain is a line of craters along the surface of an astronomical body. The descriptor term for crater chains is catena /kəˈtiːnə/, plural catenae /kəˈtiːniː/ (Latin for "chain"), as specified by the International Astronomical Union's rules on planetary nomenclature.[1]
Many examples of such chains are thought to have been formed by the impact of a body that was broken up by tidal forces into a string of smaller objects following roughly the same orbit. An example of such a tidally disrupted body that was observed prior to its impact on Jupiter is Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9. During the Voyager observations of the Jupiter system, planetary scientists identified 13 crater chains on Callisto and three on Ganymede (except those formed by secondary craters).[2] Later some of these chains turned out to be secondary or tectonic features, but some other chains were discovered. As of 1996, eight primary chains on Callisto and three on Ganymede were confirmed.[3]
However, other crater chains, such as many of those on Mars, represent chains of collapse pits associated with grabens (see, for example, the Tithoniae Catenae near Tithonium Chasma). Crater chains may also be formed by a sequence of explosive cryovolcanic eruptions, such as Set Catena on Neptune's moon Triton. [4]
Crater chains seen on the Moon often radiate from larger craters, and in such cases are thought to be either caused by secondary impacts of the larger crater's ejecta or by volcanic venting activity along a rift.[5]
Melosh_1993
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Schenk_1996
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).LPItriton
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Masursky_1978
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).