Buch is an old, worn crater that is located in the rugged southern highlands of the Moon. It was named after German geologist Leopold von Buch.[1] It lies to the northeast of the large crater Maurolycus, and the comparably sized crater Büsching is attached to the northeast rim.

Buch
Coordinates38°48′S 17°42′E / 38.8°S 17.7°E / -38.8; 17.7
Diameter54 km
Depth1.4 km
Colongitude343° at sunrise
EponymLeopold von Buch
Crater area in Selenochromatic image (Si)
Map showing Buch and Büsching

The crater rim is slightly elongated in the northeastern direction, and forms an egg-shaped depression in the surface. The rim has been eroded by many lesser impacts so that the edge is rounded and worn down, and the crater forms only a low depression in the ground. Within the crater the floor is relatively flat and featureless, with no central peak at the midpoint. There is only a small craterlet near the northwest rim.

It has been noted (by Shoemaker and others) that the satellite crater Buch B is unusual in that it possesses both a dark halo of material around the rim and appears to have formed some dark rays. Early speculation was that this may be volcanic in nature, but it was later demonstrated to be a typical impact crater that was formed over a pocket of darker material.[1]

Satellite craters

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By convention these features are identified on lunar maps by placing the letter on the side of the crater midpoint that is closest to Buch.

Buch Latitude Longitude Diameter
A 41.0° S 17.6° E 19 km
B 37.8° S 17.0° E 6 km
C 37.3° S 17.2° E 28 km
D 39.6° S 16.5° E 7 km
E 39.0° S 16.5° E 6 km

References

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  1. ^ "Buch (crater)". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
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  • ^ Chuck Wood's Lunar Picture of the Day for March 12, 2006.