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Telescope: Parks Astrolight EQ6 (6" f/6 Newtonian Reflector) Eyepiece/Magnification: 7.5mm Parks Gold Series Plössl + 2x Barlow (240x) Observer: Eric Graff Date/Time: 29 July 2009, 03:05-04:05 UT Location: San Diego, California, USA Subject: Lade & Godin (Lunar Impact Craters) Sketch: Black ink stippled on white cartridge paper Comments: Lade (56 km, across, named after Heinrich E. von Lade, a German banker and amateur astronomer of the 19th century) is the basalt-flooded remains of a ruined impact crater. The south wall has been completely destroyed and the eastern rim is low, thin, and full of gaps. The western wall appears to be a bit more substantial. The crater has a distinctive hexagonal shape. Just north of Lade is a plateau (24 km across) designated Lade B. This crater, like a miniature version of Wargentin, has been completely filled to the rim with lava. Godin (35 km, named after Louis Godin, the 18th-Century mathematician from France), in contrast with Lade, is a sharp, well-formed impact crater with terraced walls and a small central peak (hidden in shadows in the sketch, it was just becoming visible as I finished up). The crater is not perfectly circular, however; it is wider at the southern end and narrow at the northern end. An illuminated ridge outside the western wall gave me the impression of a partially opened heart-shaped locket. Godin (along with Agrippa, a crater to the north) is surrounded by an interesting arrangement of hills and mountains. I particularly enjoyed sketching the peaks west of the crater. |