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Gambart (crater)

Gambart
Gambart crater 4120 h3.jpg
Coordinates 1°00′N 15°12′W / 1.0°N 15.2°W / 1.0; -15.2Coordinates: 1°00′N 15°12′W / 1.0°N 15.2°W / 1.0; -15.2
Diameter 25 km
Depth 1.1 km
Colongitude 15° at sunrise
Eponym Jean F. A. Gambart

Gambart is a small lunar crater on the Mare Insularum, near the central region of the Moon and is named after Jean Félix Adolphe Gambart. It can be located to the south-southeast of the prominent ray crater Copernicus. Other nearby craters inclde the smaller Turner to the southeast and Reinhold to the west-northwest, less than a crater diameter south (15-20 km) is the equator. In the past, the floor of Gambart has been flooded with lava, leaving a relatively flat surface surrounded by a smooth but somewhat polygon-shaped outer rim. To the southwest of Gambart is an area of hilly terrain deposited from ejecta during the Mare Imbrium impact, known as the Fra Mauro Formation.

The smaller Gambart C crater is located to the northeast of Gambart itself. Roughly between Gambart and Gambart C is a lunar dome, a type of shield volcano.

The Surveyor 2 probe crashed to the northeast of Gambart C.

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

Lunar Orbiter 4 image of Gambart A

Oblique Apollo 12 image of Gambart A

Lunar Orbiter 2 image of Gambart C

Lunar Orbiter 3 image of Gambart J


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Wikipedia

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