Hyperwall: Tycho Central Peak
This image set is formatted for NASA's hyperwall, a tiled display with a combined resolution of up to 9600 x 3240.
On June 10, 2011, Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) slewed 65° to the west, allowing its narrow-angle camera (the LROC NAC) to capture this dramatic sunrise view of the mountains at the center of Tycho crater. It's not hard to see why this image was the winner of the Moon as Art contest.
A popular target of amateur astronomers, Tycho is located at 43.3°S, 11.4°W, and is about 85 kilometers (55 miles) wide. A system of bright ejecta rays radiating from the crater is easily visible in binoculars and small telescopes during Full Moon. The crater's features are so steep and sharp because it's only about 110 million years old, quite young by lunar standards.
LROC NAC image M162350671, cropped and scaled for 5 x 3 hyperwall.
Tycho crater (center) as it might have looked in a small telescope on Earth when LRO took its image of the central peak.
A close-up of the central peak's summit, at the same pixel scale as the original NAC image.
A view of the central peak from directly overhead, cropped from NAC image M127008391L.
A magma flow around Tycho crater that resembles a waterfall. More info.
NAC image M162350671 at its original resolution.
In this animation, the camera pans over the image as if the viewer were flying past Tycho crater, then zooms in on the summit of the central peak.
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Credits
Please give credit for this item to:
NASA/GSFC/ASU/SVS
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Animator
- Ernie Wright (USRA)
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Project support
- Laurence Schuler (ADNET Systems, Inc.)
- Ian Jones (ADNET Systems, Inc.)
Release date
This page was originally published on Wednesday, June 18, 2014.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, October 9, 2024 at 12:04 AM EDT.
Missions
This page is related to the following missions:Series
This page can be found in the following series:Datasets used
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NAC (Narrow Angle Camera) [LRO: LROC]
ID: 652
Note: While we identify the data sets used on this page, we do not store any further details, nor the data sets themselves on our site.