Palisa T (Moon)

Satellite Feature of Palisa

Named after Johann Palisa - Czechoslovakian-Austrian astronomer (1848-1925).

Palisa is the remnant of a lunar crater that is located to the west of the walled plain Ptolemaeus. It lies to the north-northeast of the crater Davy, and is attached to the lava-flooded satellite crater Davy Y by a wide break in the southwest rim. The rim is worn and eroded, especially in the western half where there are multiple gaps that join the crater floor to the Mare Nubium to the west. The interior is nearly flat, and marked only by a pair of tiny craterlets in the southwest gap. (wikipedia entry)

NW 68 km

Lalande A

MRV
1 Hour 4 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 7 Hours

N 62 km

Lalande G

Walking
1 Day 4 Hours

NE 89 km

Lalande C

MRV
1 Hour 23 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 16 Hours

W 143 km

Parry C

MRV
2 Hours 14 Minutes
Walking
2 Days 17 Hours

Palisa T

-8.26° N 351.78° E

E 41 km

Palisa D

Walking
18 Hours 56 Minutes

SW 4173 km

Lodygin(next)

MRV
2 Days 17 Hours
Walking
79 Days

S 81 km

Davy B

MRV
1 Hour 16 Minutes
Walking
1 Day 13 Hours

SE 47 km

Palisa

Walking
21 Hours 46 Minutes


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