The Compelling Late Old Moon

The compellling Late Old Moon

South is up and west is to the left in this sketch I made this morning near
daybreak of day 27 for lunation 1048. I knew the view would be poor because I
could not wait at all for the scope’s primary mirror to cool down. Therefore I
kept the magnification low and decided to sketch the compelling region from the
Ocean Procellarum to Sinus Roris. At the top of the sketch closest to the lunar
equator and near the terminator, you can see crater Reiner a 53 km. crater and to
the west of this crater is the famous bright feature Reiner Gamma. Crater Olbers
responsible for the rays in the region is lost in the bright area near the limb.
Most of the craters in this late lunation have floors in darkness and look quite
spectacular through the eyepiece. The longest bright ray from south to north
passes east of the crater pair Cardanus and Krafft both about 50 km. in diameter.
On northward a couple of hundred kilometers and just west of the bright ray the
dark crater Seleucus can be  seen and further along to the east of the ray lies Schiaparelli. Most of the remaining craters visible lie on the limb side of the continuing ray and include: large crater Russell (105 km.) with smaller Briggs and Briggs A just to the east.
  Continuing on northward across the dark smooth ocean, craters Lichtenberg and
larger Lavoisier A can be seen. At this point the bright limb highlands feature
Harding and Dechen showing bright ejecta blankets near the edge of Sinus Roris. On
the terminator side  dome complex Mons Rumker is about to experience sunset.
Finally at the far northern end of the sketch is Markov a 40 km crater on the
floor of Sinus Roris. Seeing the moon early in the morning late in a lunation is
always a  pleasant and memorable sight.
  
  Sketching:
  For this sketch I used: black Strathmore 400 Artagain paper 12”x 7”, white and
  black Conte’ pastel pencils a blending stump and my index finger too. Brightness
  was slightly adjusted after scanning.
  Telescope: 10” inch f/ 5.7 Dobsonian and 21mm eyepiece 69x
  
  Date: 10-8-2007 10:30-11:15 UT
  Temperature: 22° C (72° F)
  Clear, calm
  Seeing: Antoniadi III
  Colongitude: 234.1 °
  Lunation: 27 days
  Illumination: 7 %
  
  Frank McCabe

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