Topography of the Lunar South Polar Region: Implications for the Size and Location of Permanently Shaded Areas
We analyze Clementine altimetry to constrain the size and location of proposed permanently shadowed regions in the vicinity of the lunar south pole. Long and short wavelength topography in the vicinity of the pole, in combination with measurements of depths of well-preserved craters and basins and t...
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ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:19980017790 2023-05-15T18:21:52+02:00 Topography of the Lunar South Polar Region: Implications for the Size and Location of Permanently Shaded Areas Smith, David E. Zuber, Maria T. Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available Sep. 1997 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19980017790 unknown Document ID: 19980017790 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19980017790 Copyright, Distribution as joint owner in the copyright CASI Lunar and Planetary Exploration NASA/CR-97-207139 NAS 1.26:207139 Geophysical Research Letters (ISSN 0094-8534); 24; 17; 2183-2186 1997 ftnasantrs 2019-07-21T03:10:42Z We analyze Clementine altimetry to constrain the size and location of proposed permanently shadowed regions in the vicinity of the lunar south pole. Long and short wavelength topography in the vicinity of the pole, in combination with measurements of depths of well-preserved craters and basins and the lunar topographic power spectrum, have direct bearing on the nature of elevations in the south polar region. A criterion based on geometric considerations and altimetry demonstrates that the existence of permanent shadowing is not very sensitive to the elevation of the south pole. In addition, permanent shadowing cannot be a consequence of large structures such as the South Pole-Aitken Basin and/or a 300-km degraded polar basin. Perennially dark regions, if they exist, are most likely associated with craters or other axisymmetric features with diameters of at most 80 km centered at the pole. For structures displaced 2 deg from the pole the maximum allowable diameter decreases to approximately 30 km. Other/Unknown Material South pole NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) Aitken ENVELOPE(-44.516,-44.516,-60.733,-60.733) South Pole |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) |
op_collection_id |
ftnasantrs |
language |
unknown |
topic |
Lunar and Planetary Exploration |
spellingShingle |
Lunar and Planetary Exploration Smith, David E. Zuber, Maria T. Topography of the Lunar South Polar Region: Implications for the Size and Location of Permanently Shaded Areas |
topic_facet |
Lunar and Planetary Exploration |
description |
We analyze Clementine altimetry to constrain the size and location of proposed permanently shadowed regions in the vicinity of the lunar south pole. Long and short wavelength topography in the vicinity of the pole, in combination with measurements of depths of well-preserved craters and basins and the lunar topographic power spectrum, have direct bearing on the nature of elevations in the south polar region. A criterion based on geometric considerations and altimetry demonstrates that the existence of permanent shadowing is not very sensitive to the elevation of the south pole. In addition, permanent shadowing cannot be a consequence of large structures such as the South Pole-Aitken Basin and/or a 300-km degraded polar basin. Perennially dark regions, if they exist, are most likely associated with craters or other axisymmetric features with diameters of at most 80 km centered at the pole. For structures displaced 2 deg from the pole the maximum allowable diameter decreases to approximately 30 km. |
format |
Other/Unknown Material |
author |
Smith, David E. Zuber, Maria T. |
author_facet |
Smith, David E. Zuber, Maria T. |
author_sort |
Smith, David E. |
title |
Topography of the Lunar South Polar Region: Implications for the Size and Location of Permanently Shaded Areas |
title_short |
Topography of the Lunar South Polar Region: Implications for the Size and Location of Permanently Shaded Areas |
title_full |
Topography of the Lunar South Polar Region: Implications for the Size and Location of Permanently Shaded Areas |
title_fullStr |
Topography of the Lunar South Polar Region: Implications for the Size and Location of Permanently Shaded Areas |
title_full_unstemmed |
Topography of the Lunar South Polar Region: Implications for the Size and Location of Permanently Shaded Areas |
title_sort |
topography of the lunar south polar region: implications for the size and location of permanently shaded areas |
publishDate |
1997 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19980017790 |
op_coverage |
Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(-44.516,-44.516,-60.733,-60.733) |
geographic |
Aitken South Pole |
geographic_facet |
Aitken South Pole |
genre |
South pole |
genre_facet |
South pole |
op_source |
CASI |
op_relation |
Document ID: 19980017790 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19980017790 |
op_rights |
Copyright, Distribution as joint owner in the copyright |
_version_ |
1766201197280100352 |