Leucippus (crater)

Leucippus is a lunar crater on the Moon's far side. It is relatively isolated from other named crater, although it is located just over a crater diameter to the south-southeast of the huge Landau walled-plain. To the southwest of Leucippus is the larger satellite crater 'Leucippus Q'.

The rim of Leucippus is eroded, with a smaller crater laid across the southern end. A small craterlet lies along the western inner wall. The edge and inner wall is generally lacking in detail, forming a relatively smooth, gentle slope down to the interior floor. This interior is offset slightly to the southeast, where the inner wall is narrower. The floor is about half the diameter of the crater. There is a small craterlet on the floor along the southern edge, and a few tiny craterlets mark the otherwise relatively level surface.

General characteristics
Latitude 29.1° N
Longitude 116.0° W
Diameter 56 km
Depth Unknown
Colongitude   116° at sunrise
Eponym Leucippus
References See listing

Satellite craters

By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater mid-point that is closest to Leucippus crater.

Leucippus Latitude Longitude Diameter
F 29.1° N 113.0° W 19 km
K 27.2° N 115.0° W 14 km
Q 25.9° N 118.8° W 84 km
X 33.4° N 118.8° W 36 km

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/"
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

Index

Scientificlib.com