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AS 14-70-9671 - The "Bright One"
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This crater on the Lunar Far-Side is similar in age and size to the near- side crater Euler. It is located midway between the craters Becvar and Langemak. About 36 Km in diameter, it was informally called the "Bright One" by the Apollo 14 Astronauts because of its bright ejecta and ray pattern. The bright halo that surrounds the crater is about 150 Km in diameter. Its brightness is not evident in this view because the picture was taken when the Sun angle was low. The radial pattern of dunelike ejecta around the crater is most apparent where the Sun's rays are perpendicular to the direction of ejecta flow, as in the lower part of the picture. The hummocky or bumpy floor of the crater is caused largely by material that has slumped from the walls. Stuart A. Roosa, the Apollo 14 CMP, used a handheld camera with an 80-mm lens for this photograph. Later, using a 500-mm lens, he photographed in much more detail that part of the floor of the crater outlined in this photograph and shown in AS 14-9975.
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