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Fascinating Mare Crisium, Astroavani - Avani Soares

Fascinating Mare Crisium

Fascinating Mare Crisium, Astroavani - Avani Soares

Fascinating Mare Crisium

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Description

Mare Crisium is one of the easiest places to identify the moon. He is great in and of itself, is not connected to another sea. He actually has little observational interest inside except for the craters listed in the attached photo. But around Mare Crisium there are fascinating craters are observed, starting with the bright crater wall Proclus right. With the lighting of the picture above, only one of its areas defined by rays can be seen in addition to a slightly fainter rays deposited in Mare Crisium. The Proclus is a very young crater, but no date yet set, generated by an oblique impact. The left edge of the image above is a fascinating crater with severe to observers and to those wishing to make an image of her challenges. Small craters with dark halos and narrow channels are inside but are only visible in other images. The best opportunity to observe the crater dark halo is probably the Moon when hlaos become more prominent. A favorite of the craters where noted such feature is located at the extreme right portion.

But what really caught my attention in this photo were the Promontorium Agarum and Lavinium. They have excelled greatly conveying the feeling of being perfect mountains rising edges of Mare Crisium.

Other prominent mountains can be seen around the circumference of the Crisium and want to draw attention to the range of hills situated above Lavinium and sparse left to fund Agarum what is the eastern edge of Crisium mountains.

Source: LPOD / Cienctec

Adaptation: Avani Soares

122 frames stacked in AS! 2

Mosaic using iMerge

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Fascinating Mare Crisium, Astroavani - Avani Soares