PASADENA, Calif. -- This Dawn FC (framing camera) mosaic shows
craters with both sharp and smooth rims, a ‘ghost’ crater and dark and
bright material in Vesta’s southern hemisphere. The craters with both
sharp and smooth rims, shown in yesterday’s Image of the Day (# 76), are
in the far left of this mosaic. The ‘ghost’ crater is located in the
bottom left corner of the second square in the mosaic. It is visible as a
shallow, roughly circular depression which is infilled with material of
different albedos (eg. brightness). This infilling material is probably
Vesta’s regolith, which is a layer of loose material/ debris. This
ghost crater must be reasonably old to be so comprehensively filled with
regolith. It has also been cratered by many small impacts. There is
quite a lot of dark and bright material distributed throughout this
mosaic, some of which is associated with the craters and some of which
does not appear to be associated with craters visible at this
resolution.
NASA’s Dawn spacecraft obtained the images that form
this mosaic with its framing camera on September 30, 2011. These images
were taken through the camera’s clear filter. The distance to the
surface of Vesta is 702km and the images each have a resolution of about
63 meters per pixel.
Image Credit: NASA/ JPL-Caltech/ UCLA/ MPS/ DLR/ IDA
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