Picard is a lunar impact crater that lies in Mare Crisium. The crater is named for 17th century French astronomer and geodesist Jean Picard.[2] It is the biggest non-flooded crater of this mare, being slightly larger than Peirce to the north-northwest. To the west is the almost completely flooded crater Yerkes. To east of Picard is the tiny Curtis.
Coordinates | 14°34′N 54°43′E / 14.57°N 54.72°E |
---|---|
Diameter | 22.35 km (13.89 mi) |
Depth | 2.4 km[1] |
Colongitude | 306° at sunrise |
Eponym | Jean-Félix Picard |
Picard is a crater from the Eratosthenian period, which lasted from 3.2 to 1.1 billion years ago.[3] Inside Picard is a series of terraces that seismologists have attributed to a collapse of the crater floor. It has a cluster of low hills at the bottom.[4]
By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater midpoint that is closest to Picard.[5]
Picard | Coordinates | Diameter, km |
---|---|---|
K | 9°44′N 54°34′E / 9.73°N 54.56°E | 9 |
L | 10°19′N 54°19′E / 10.32°N 54.31°E | 7 |
M | 10°13′N 53°57′E / 10.21°N 53.95°E | 8 |
N | 10°31′N 53°34′E / 10.52°N 53.57°E | 19 |
P | 8°49′N 53°37′E / 8.82°N 53.62°E | 8 |
Y | 13°11′N 60°16′E / 13.18°N 60.27°E | 4 |
The following craters have been renamed by the IAU.