Un rocher inhabituel sur Tycho's Peak
Main Image Credit:
NASA,
Arizona State U.,
LRO;
Upper Inset:
NASA,
Arizona State U.,
LRO;
Lower Inset:
Gregory H. Revera
Why is there a large boulder near the center of Tycho's peak?
Tycho crater on
the Moon is one of the easiest features to see,
visible even to the unaided eye (inset, lower right).
But at the
center of Tycho (inset, upper left) is a something unusual -- a 120-meter boulder.
This boulder was imaged at very high resolution
at sunrise, over the past decade,
by the Moon-circling
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO).
The leading origin hypothesis is that that the boulder was thrown during the
tremendous collision that formed Tycho crater about 110 million years ago, and by chance came back down right near the center of the
newly-formed central mountain.
Over the next billion years meteor impacts and
moonquakes should slowly degrade
Tycho's center, likely causing the central boulder to tumble 2000 meters down to the
crater floor and disintegrate.