Search wiki using Sphinx

From The Space Library

Jump to: navigation, search

Displaying 1—10 of 135 matches for query "Mare_Novum" retrieved in 0.000 sec with these stats:

  • "mare" found 202 times in 136 documents
  • "novum" found 2 times in 2 documents

Above numbers may include documents not listed due to search options.


Image:Lunokhodpans.jpg border 600px Image is from the New Horizons - by Robert Godwin ©2011 To purchase the complete set of color posters with DVD and Apollo models please visit the following link Image:9781926837123.jpg '''Buy This Book''' http://www.apogeeprime.com/prime/bookpages/9781926837123.html Click here The Lunokhod Panorama seen here is not ...
... -Curie Crater" by Soviet scientists, but it was re-identified by the Arizona laboratory as Mare Novum (New Sea), first identified by German astronomer Julius Franz near the turn of the century ...
... would yield "very young rocks . . . , young volcanics. So one may be able to extend the mare type ages . and see just how long it took the surface of the moon ... to ... , some very distinctive characteristics .... There is no clear evidence that we are close to mare. The nearest obvious mare surface is several hundred kilometers 100 km equals 62 mi to the ... northwest ... all of the big circular basins, and there is a flat floor that predates the mare that is cut by graben faulting . . . Also in the site we have the ... north and ...
... with surrounding terrain. Far side appeared mountainous. Copernicus Crater was deficiency region; Sinus Aestuum, Mare Serenitatis, and Mare Crisium were high regions; and Littrow landing site was low. Harold Masursky of U ... expected except that there were a couple of surprises." Experimenters had expected that "over the Mare, the smooth areas, ... we'd have a reasonably smooth, well-behaved echo, and over the ...
... Jarry, ''Adventures in ’pataphysics'' . translations by Paul Edwards & Antony Melville. London: Atlas, 2001. See also Novum Organum du Collège de ’Pataphysique http://www.college-de-pataphysique.org/college/ accueill.html
... ) mascon-mass concentration of gravitational pull-on moon's far side and of fact that Mare Marginis at eastern edge was flooded fraction of mascon basin was reported in Science by ... times heavier than mascons associated with Mares Imbrium and Serenitatis on moon's near side. If mare material was confirmed in basin, discoverers proposed calling it Mare Occulum (Hidden Sea). Dr. Campbell said ...
... than undisturbed surface. Chemical composition of surface material was similar to basaltic rocks on earth; mare material contained more iron elements than highland material; and highland material had higher albedo than ... pulverized" by meteoroid impacts; some undefined process lightened optical surface and darkened buried material; and mare areas were "surprisingly similar and offer numerous safe-landing zones for future lunar missions." ''(A ...
... from 10 areas in Hadley region during July 26- Aug. 7, 1971, mission. Samples were mare basalts and breccias with variety of premare igneous rocks. "The bulk chemical compositions and textures ... of anorthositic fragments along with clasts of basaltic rocks much richer in plagioclase than the mare basalts. These two rock types also occur as common components in soil samples from this site. The rocks and soils from both the front and mare region exhibit a variety of shock characteristics that can best be ascribed to ray material ...
... density of underlying material and permitted development of models to help interpret mascons. Analysis of mare basalts from the Apollo 11 , 12, 15, and 17 missions and from the U.S.S.R.'s Luna 16 indicated that the filling of the mare basins took place mostly between 3.2 billion and 3.8 billion yrs ago. Formation ... as old as 15 billion to 4.6 billion yrs existed on the moon. Dark mare regions were thought to be underlain by lava, but craters had been mostly caused by ...
... Hadley Mountain, which was pretty high. I forget exactly how high it was above the mare, but about 11,000 feet, and then plopped down right on the other side of ... said, about six kilometers from this portion of the mountain that came down to the mare surface. We couldn’t get up on top of Mount Hadley, that was way too ... up 100 meters or 100 some odd—100 meters or a little more above the mare plain. The rover climbed right up there pretty well. It got in some pretty steep ...

Additional database time was 0.140 sec.


Result page: 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  Next 
 
Search in namespaces:

















Powered by Sphinx
Views