Artemis Chasma

Summary

The Artemis Chasma is the nearly circular fracture in Venus's surface which almost encloses Artemis Corona. The chasma and its associating corona can be found on the Aphrodite Terra continent, at Latitude 35° South, Longitude 135° East. It was first described in 1980.[1]

Artemis Chasma
The near-circular trough of Artemis Chasma
Feature typeChasma
Coordinates35°S 135°E / 35°S 135°E / -35; 135
Diameter2,600 km
EponymArtemis

It is named after the Artemis, the Greek virgin goddess of the hunt and the Moon, the hills, the forest, birth, virginity, and fertility, who carries a bow and arrow.

External links edit

  • A picture of Artemis Corona and its Chasma from NASA

References edit

  1. ^ Masursky, H., Eliason, E., Ford, P. G., McGill, G. E., Pettengill, G. H., Schaber, G. G., & Schubert, G. (1980). "Pioneer Venus radar results: Geology from images and altimetry". Journal of Geophysical Research. 85 (A13): 8232. Bibcode:1980JGR....85.8232M. doi:10.1029/ja085ia13p08232.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)