Feuillée (crater)

Feuillée is a small lunar impact crater in the eastern part of the Mare Imbrium. It was named after French natural scientist Louis Feuillée.[1] It lies less than a half crater diameter to the northwest of Beer, and the two formations form a nearly matched pair. To the west is the small but prominent crater Timocharis.

Feuillée
Apollo 15 Mapping Camera image with Feuillée at left and Beer at right
Coordinates27.4°N 9.4°W / 27.4; -9.4
Diameter9 km
Depth1.8 km
Colongitude10° at sunrise
EponymLouis Feuillée
Oblique view from Apollo 15 Panoramic Camera

Like Beer, Feuillée is a circular, bowl-shaped formation with a small interior floor at the midpoint of the sloping inner walls. This sharp-edged crater is not notably worn or eroded, and lacks any distinguishing features. It does, however, lie across a wrinkle ridge in the surface of the lunar mare, a feature that is best observed under oblique lighting conditions when the crater is near the terminator.

The crater name is incorrectly spelled Feuillet on some lunar charts.

References

  1. "Feuillée (crater)". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
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