Ryder (crater) explained

Coordinates:-44.5°N 143.2°W
Diameter:17 km
Depth:Unknown
Colong:217
Eponym:Graham Ryder[1]

Ryder is a crater on the far side of the Moon. It is located in a patch of higher albedo surface material to the east of the larger RochePauli crater pair. The name for this crater was officially approved at the IAU general assembly in 2006.

This circular-rimmed crater lies along the eastern rim of a larger formation that is most likely the remains of an old, worn impact. Less than a crater diameter to the west of Ryder is the 24-km-diameter satellite crater Pauli E. Ryder is an oblique impact, and a coherent, layered piece of the lunar crust lies on its side on the eastern side of the crater.[2]

References

. Patrick Moore . 2001 . On the Moon . . 978-0-304-35469-6 .

. Antonín Rükl . 1990 . Atlas of the Moon . . 978-0-913135-17-4 .

. Thomas William Webb . 1962 . Celestial Objects for Common Telescopes . 6th revised . Dover . 978-0-486-20917-3 .

. Ewen Whitaker . 1999 . Mapping and Naming the Moon . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-62248-6 .

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2006-09-08 . Crater Posthumously Named After LPI Scientist Graham Ryder . . 2006-10-05 .
  2. Motomaro Shirao, Charles A. Wood, 2011, The Kaguya Lunar Atlas: The Moon in High Resolution, Plate 92: Ryder. Springer Publications