Hamlet of Oberon
Astrogeology Team (USGS), The Voyager Project
What's in a name?
Since 1919, the
International Astronomical Union has been
charged with the task of establishing
"conventional" nomenclature for planets, satellites,
and surface features.
For the remote
Uranian system of moons, namesakes from
Shakespearean works have been chosen.
Thus Oberon, king of the mid-summer night fairies, is also
Uranus' most distant and second largest moon
and Hamlet is a tragically large and princely
crater on its surface.
The above image represents known surface
features of Oberon and
was constructed by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) based on data from
NASA's robot explorer Voyager 2.
Hamlet is the large dark crater to the right of center.
In 1986, Voyager 2
flew through the Uranian system -
so far it has been the only spacecraft to do so.