Casatus (crater) explained

Coordinates:-72.6°N -30.5°W
Diameter:111 km
Depth:5.5 km
Colong:35
Eponym:Paolo Casati

Casatus is a lunar impact crater that is located near the southern limb of the Moon. The north-northeast rim of the crater overlies a portion of the slightly larger crater Klaproth. Along the western rim, Casatus A intrudes somewhat into the interior, producing an inward-bowing rim. To the southeast of Casatus is Newton.

The outer rim of Casatus is old and worn, with many tiny impacts along the rim and inner wall. The small satellite crater Casatus J lies across the south-southeastern rim. The height of the rim is lower where it divides this crater from Klaproth, forming a rounded ridge.

The interior floor is a nearly level surface marked by several tiny ghost-crater rims projecting above the surface and a pair of clefts in the southern part of the floor. A small, bowl-shaped impact crater forms a prominent feature in the northern half of the floor. There is no central peak formation at or near the midpoint of the interior.

Satellite craters

By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater midpoint that is closest to Casatus.

CasatusLatitudeLongitudeDiameter
A73.0° S38.9° W56 km
C72.2° S30.2° W17 km
D77.2° S44.3° W36 km
E79.1° S53.2° W41 km
H72.0° S21.3° W35 km
J74.3° S32.8° W22 km
K75.0° S41.4° W36 km

References