Hi, Rob, List

   The Moon being down at my location (and it being
too cloudy when it was up), I'm guessing (disclaimer).
I had a terminator map drawn up for the time of the
impact (four hours too early), but the lunar terminator
just strolls along, taking 14 days to cross the Moon, so
I doubt it's moved more than 12 miles or so in 4 hours!
   The only northern hemisphere circular feature intersected
by the terminator is J. Herschel (west and a little north of
Plato, on the northern edge of Mare Frigoris).
   It's roughly 90 miles across (156 km), a disintegrated
walled plain with a cratered south and southeast wall and
a broken, mountainous northwestern wall with a "lofty"
(H. P. Wilkin's term) mountain on its western border.
   For quick identification, it's about 25% bigger than
Plato, and most of its area is in the "dark." Look at this
terminator map on-line (also drawn for the earlier time):
http://media.skytonight.com/images/SMART-1+VMA_L.jpg
   J. Herschel is the ring just above and left of the green
word MARE in Mare Frigoris.


Sterling K. Webb
------------------------------------------------------------------------
----- Original Message ----- From: "Matson, Robert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "MexicoDoug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Sterling K. Webb " <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Saturday, September 02, 2006 11:29 PM
Subject: SMART-1's impact


At the moment, weather looks promising here in southern California for
viewing the SMART-1 impact on the Moon at 10:43 pm PDT (Saturday night).
Btw, what crater rim is that that's lit up in the northern hemisphere
east of the terminator?  Very interesting site right now (9:30pm PDT)
with the semicircle of bright light extending into the lunar darkside.

--Rob





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