Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera

Small Clearing

LROC NAC M1144856403R of a mound littered with boulders located within the floor of Tycho crater. The small clearing, which lacks boulders, is most likely squeezed up impact melt. Image width is ~2400 ft (730 m) and North points up [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].

Tycho crater is one of the most spectacular craters on the Moon. If you've never done so, next time you get access to a pair of binoculars and the Moon is near full, look at the Moon's southern hemisphere: you will see a very bright crater with spectacular rays emanating from it. That's Tycho! It formed when an asteroid (or comet) going at 44,740 mph (~20 km/s) hurled into the Moon around 110 million years ago. That age may seem old to you and me, but by lunar standards, that is young. We think we sampled impact melt that originated from Tycho at the Apollo 17 landing site, but we can also tell it's young just by looking at it: it has a crisp morphology and its rays are seen as high reflectance streaks. With time, exposure to the space environment will fade the rays and erode the crater's sharp features into smooth curves.

During an impact event, almost all of an impactor's kinetic energy gets deposited as internal energy into the target rock. The near-surface layers of the shock melted rock begin cooling relatively quickly, creating a hardened crust lining the crater floor. The subsurface melt, however, can take up to ~500,000 years to cool! This post-impact thermal structure sculpts the floor of many lunar impact craters.

Today's Featured Image is a ledge of a mound on the floor of Tycho crater. The mound is littered with meter-sized boulders, except for this smooth portion on this western ledge. Why is this portion so smooth? The two apparently identical looking (~130 ft) craters that dot the smooth region probably did not have enough energy to push the boulders aside, and they most likely did not excavate enough material to cover the boulders. The answer may be that still molten rock extruded from beneath the cooled crust, oozing onto the surface, leaving the boulders just out of sight.

LROC WAC mosaic of Tycho crater; Tycho's diameter is ~53 miles (85 km). Red rectangle is the LROC NAC footprint, and inset is the LROC NAC M1144856403R zoomed out view of today's Feature Image, showing a larger portion of the mound [NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University].

Can you find other examples of effusive events and melt squeeze ups in the full resolution NAC? Hint: look along the floor fractures.

Related Posts:

Tycho Central Peak Spectacular!

The Floor of Tycho - Constellation Region of Interest

View From The Other Side

Jackson's Complexity


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