Galle (Martian crater)

Not to be confused with Gale (crater).
Galle

Photographed by the Mars Global Surveyor, 1999-03-10
Planet Mars
Coordinates 51°12′S 30°54′W / 51.2°S 30.9°W / -51.2; -30.9Coordinates: 51°12′S 30°54′W / 51.2°S 30.9°W / -51.2; -30.9
Diameter 230.0 km
Eponym Johann Gottfried Galle

Galle is a crater on Mars. It is located on the eastern rim of the huge impact basin Argyre Planitia in Argyre quadrangle. It is named after the astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle. Galle is often known as the "happy face crater" because the illusion of a smiley is created by a curved mountain range in the southern part of the crater and two smaller mountain clusters further north. The formation was first photographed by Viking Orbiter 1.

A second "happy face crater", smaller than Galle and located at 45.1°S, 55.0°W in Nereidum Montes, was discovered by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on January 28, 2008.[1]

Appearance in Watchmen

As the smiley is a key motif in the comic book Watchmen by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons, the crater was used as a story location after the coincidence was noted by Gibbons. According to Gibbons, the similarity "was almost too good to be true. I worried that if we put it in, people would never believe it."[2] The crater also appears in the same scene during the film adaptation.

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Galle crater, Mars.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.