Eddington (crater)
Eddington is the lava-flooded remnant of a lunar impact crater, located on the western part of Oceanus Procellarum. The western rim is attached to the wall of the walled plain Struve. To the east-southeast is the smaller but prominent crater Seleucus. South of Eddington is Krafft.
Mosaic of two Lunar Orbiter 4 images | |
Coordinates | 21.5°N 71.8°W |
---|---|
Diameter | 125 km |
Depth | None |
Colongitude | 72° at sunrise |
Eponym | Arthur S. Eddington |
The south and southeastern rim of Eddington is almost completely gone, leaving only a few ridges and promontories in the lunar mare to trace the outline of the original crater. As a consequence, Eddington is now essentially a bay in the Oceanus Procellarum. The remainder of the rim is worn and irregular, forming a mountainous arc that is widest in the north. The floor is almost free of craters of significance, with the nearly submerged crater Eddington P lying in the southeast sector. If the crater once had a central peak, it is no longer evident.
The crater was named after the British astronomer and mathematician Sir Arthur Eddington.