Coordinates | 2°37′S 165°37′E / 2.61°S 165.62°E |
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Diameter | 46.31 km |
Depth | Unknown |
Colongitude | 195° at sunrise |
Eponym | James Dewar |
Dewar is a lunar impact crater that lies on the Moon's far side. Less than one crater diameter to the south-southwest is the crater Stratton. Vening Meinesz is a little over one crater diameter to the northwest. The slightly worn rim of this crater is roughly circular, with a small outward protrusion along the southern edge. The interior floor is marked by several small impacts along the eastern side.
The crater was named after British chemist James Dewar by the IAU in 1970.[1]
Dewar lies on the south side of an anomalously low albedo area of terrain (dark patch) on the far side of the Moon. The low-albedo area is also a geochemical anomaly, and is high in iron oxide and titanium dioxide. It has been interpreted as a cryptomare.[2]