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Van der Waals (crater)

General characteristics
Latitude 43.9° S
Longitude 119.9° E
Diameter 104 km
Depth Unknown
Colongitude   242° at sunrise
Eponym Johannes Van der Waals
References See listing

Van Der Waals is a lunar crater on the far side of the Moon. It is a heavily eroded feature with an irregular outer rim. The edge is lowest along the southern side where it is little more than a circular crest along the ground. It is more developed along the northern side, but the rim is notched and rugged. The satellite crater 'Van Der Waals W' is attached to the exterior of the northeast, and 'Van Der Waals H' intrudes into the rim along the southeast. The interior floor is relatively even and featureless, with only a few tiny craterlets to mark the surface.

Nearby craters of note include Clark to the north, Carver to the east, and Pikel'ner to the southeast. About two crater diameters to the west-southwest is Lebedev crater.

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 Van der Waals crater.

Van der
Waals
Latitude Longitude Diameter
B 41.0° S 121.0° E 17 km
C 40.5° S 123.6° E 24 km
H 44.3° S 121.7° E 31 km
K 45.8° S 122.0° E 55 km
W 41.3° S 117.1° E 46 km







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