Copernicus A (Moon)

Satellite Feature of Copernicus

Named after Nicholas Copernicus - Polish astronomer (1473-1543).

Copernicus is a large crater on Mars, with a diameter close to 300 km. It is located south of the planet's equator in the heavily cratered highlands of Terra Sirenum in the Phaethontis quadrangle at 48.8°S and 191.2°E. The impact that formed Copernicus likely occurred more than 3 billion years ago. The crater contains smaller craters within its basin and is particularly notable for gully formations that are presumed to be indicative of past liquid water flows. (wikipedia entry)

NW 103 km

Gay-Lussac J

MRV
1 Hour 37 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 23 Hours

N 113 km

Gay-Lussac A

MRV
1 Hour 46 Minutes
Walking
2 Days 3 Hours

NE 126 km

Copernicus L

MRV
1 Hour 58 Minutes
Walking
2 Days 9 Hours

W 3695 km

Lodygin(next)

MRV
2 Days 9 Hours
Walking
69 Days 22 Hours

Copernicus A

9.52° N 341.1° E

E 87 km

Copernicus P

MRV
1 Hour 22 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 15 Hours

SW 120 km

Copernicus B

MRV
1 Hour 52 Minutes
Walking
2 Days 6 Hours

S 77 km

Copernicus H

MRV
1 Hour 12 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 11 Hours

SE 75 km

Copernicus R

MRV
1 Hour 10 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 10 Hours


Built by Inkleby based on data from the Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature.
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