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Rabbi Levi (crater)

Lunar impact crater

Rabbi Levi (crater)

Lunar impact crater

FieldValue
imageFile:Rabbi Levi crater 4083_h3.jpg
captionLunar Orbiter 4 image
coordinates
diameter82.44 km
depth3.5 km
colong336
eponymLevi ben Gershon
The crater area at the right of selenochromatic image (Si)

Rabbi Levi is a lunar impact crater that is located among the rugged highlands in the southeastern part of the Moon's near side. Several notable craters are located nearby, including Zagut just to the north-northwest, the heavily impacted Riccius to the southeast, and Lindenau to the northeast next to Zagut.

This is a heavily worn and eroded crater formation, with several smaller craters lying along the incised rim and across the interior floor. A group of these craters form a cluster in the western part of the floor, consisting of the satellite craters A, L, M, and D, as well as lesser craterlets trailing away to the south-southeast. The largest of these craters is Rabbi Levi L, a bowl-shaped formation just to the northwest of the midpoint. The remainder of the floor is relatively level and nearly featureless. Clusters of craters also lay across the eastern and southwestern sections of the rim.

Attached to the northeast is the remnant of an old formation that intrudes into Rabbi Levi, producing a straightened section of rim along that face. This unnamed formation has been almost completely obliterated, and is overlain in the northwest by Lindenau, and along the outer northeast side by Rothmann.

The crater is named after the Medieval French Jewish scholar Levi ben Gershon, better known by his Graecized name as Gersonides.

Satellite craters

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

Rabbi
LeviLatitudeLongitudeDiameter
A34.3° S22.7° E12 km
B34.5° S24.8° E13 km
C34.3° S27.0° E20 km
D35.4° S22.8° E10 km
E36.7° S22.1° E35 km
F36.0° S20.5° E12 km
G36.9° S22.0° E12 km
H36.4° S20.2° E8 km
J37.6° S22.7° E7 km
L34.7° S23.0° E13 km
M35.2° S23.2° E11 km
N36.4° S23.7° E8 km
O35.7° S25.1° E7 km
P34.5° S25.8° E15 km
Q33.7° S25.8° E6 km
R33.6° S28.2° E12 km
S34.2° S27.5° E14 km
T36.2° S22.4° E10 km
U35.6° S21.9° E14 km

References

  • {{cite book | author-link2 = Ewen Whitaker
  • {{cite book | author-link1 = Ben Bussey | author-link2 = Paul Spudis
  • {{cite book
  • {{cite web | access-date = 2007-10-24 | archive-date = 2012-02-08 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120208141804/http://host.planet4589.org/astro/lunar/ | url-status = dead
  • {{cite book | author-link = Patrick Moore
  • {{cite book
  • {{cite book | author-link = Antonín Rükl
  • {{cite book | author-link = Thomas William Webb
  • {{cite book | author-link = Ewen Whitaker
  • {{cite book

References

  1. "Rabbi Levi". [[International Astronomical Union]].
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