Lalande (crater)

Lalande
Apollo 12 image
Coordinates4°24′S 8°36′W / 4.4°S 8.6°W / -4.4; -8.6
Diameter24 km
Depth2.6 km
Colongitude9° at sunrise
EponymJérôme Lalande
The crater area in a Selenochromatic format Image (Si)
Oblique view of Lalande from Apollo 16, facing north

Lalande is a small lunar impact crater that lies in the central part of the visible Moon, on the eastern edge of Mare Insularum. It was named after French astronomer Jérôme Lalande.[1] The crater is surrounded by a high-albedo area of ejecta that extends into a ray system with a maximum radius of over 300 kilometers. The interior wall has a terrace system, and there is a small central rise at the midpoint of the floor. It was formed during the Copernican period of the moon extending from 1.1 billion years ago to the present. Its young age is indicated by the bright rays of ejecta surrounding the crater, its sharp features, and the relative lack of later impacts in its interior.[2] The rays of ejecta from Lalande overlay the ejecta rays from Copernicus Crater, meaning it is younger than Copernicus, and thus no more than 800 million years old.[3]

In 2002, a meteorite was discovered in the Oman desert by Edwin Gnos of the University of Berne. This rock, identified as Sayh al Uhaymir 169, is believed to have originated from the Moon. It was ejected from the surface during an impact that occurred less than 340,000 years in the past. Scientists now think that the rock originated from the crater ejecta blanket surrounding Lalande.[4]

  1. ^ "Lalande (crater)". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  2. ^ Li et al., Geological Mapping of Lunar Crater Lalande: Topographic Configuration, Morphology and Cratering Process[1]
  3. ^ Apollo 14 Preliminary Science Report
  4. ^ Gnos, Edwin, et al., 2004, Pinpointing the Source of a Lunar Meteorite: Implications for the Evolution of the Moon, Science 30 July 2004: Vol. 305 no. 5684 pp. 657-659 DOI: 10.1126/science.1099397 abstract