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Gagarin (crater)

General characteristics
Latitude 20.2° S
Longitude 149.2° E
Diameter 265 km
Depth Unknown
Colongitude   215° at sunrise
Eponym Yuri Gagarin
References See listing

Gagarin is a large lunar impact crater that is located in the southern hemisphere on the far side of the Moon. To the southwest is the Pavlov crater and to the northeast lies Keeler. Closer to the rim is Levi-Civita crater to the southwest, and Beijerinck crater to the north-northeast. The Denning crater lies entirely within the northwest rim of Gagarin, a feature that possesses a floor with a somewhat low albedo, in contrast with the floor of Gagarin.

The Gagarin crater has been heavily eroded by a long history of crater impacts. The worn rim forms a low, circular ridge around the somewhat bowl-shaped interior. The inner floor is covered by a multitude of crater impacts of various dimensions. Little if anything remains of a central ridge, if the crater ever possessed such a feature.

Satellite craters

By convention these features are identified on Lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater mid-point that is closest to Gagarin crater.

Gagarin Latitude Longitude Diameter
G 20.5° S 150.5° E 14 km
M 23.5° S 149.2° E 19 km
T 19.4° S 144.5° E 24 km
Z 15.4° S 149.4° E 29 km







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