Schickard Home

Move your mouse over the picture to see the names of the various craters.

Schickard is the largest crater on the visible side of the Moon with a diameter of 233 Km.   Because of its position near the western limb, it appears eliptical when in fact it is circlar.  To emphasise this effect, I have added a third, 100 Km, scale marker in a direction corresponding approximately to the direction of minimum scale.  To the south of Schickard are Nasmyth, 80 Km in diamter and 2300 metres deep, and Phocylides which is 117 Km in diameter.
The picture was taken with a ToUcam attached to my LX200 on 25th October 2004 at 22:26 UT, when the Moon was 12.6 days old.
A mosaic of this picture and the two to the south can be seen here.

Date and Time: 25th October 2004 at 22:26 UT
Camera: ToUcam 740K
Telescope: LX200 at prime focus
Capture: K3CCDTools. High gamma, 1/500", 0% gain, 321 frames
Processing: Registax. 102 frames stacked. Wavelet 1,2 = 10
And here is the same area with the light coming from the opposite side.  (I regret that the image is rather differently orientated too.)  The picture above was taken at day 12.6 and this one at day 26.3 when the Moon was a small crescent in the morning sky.  It is also taken in infra-red light which helps to remove the glow in the sky caused by the imminent dawn.
The picture was taken with a ToUcam attached to my LX200 on 31st August 2005 at 04:38 UT, when the Moon was 26.3 days old.

Date and Time: 31st August 2005 at 04:38 UT
Camera: ToUcam 740K
Telescope: LX200 at prime focus with IR-pass filter
Capture: K3CCDTools. Low gamma, 1/25", 61% gain, 393 frames
Processing: Registax. 80 frames stacked. Wavelet 1,2 = 10
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