Emily Lakdawalla • Feb 21, 2008
Dark-halo craters on Mercury
The MESSENGER team released another image from the first Mercury flyby today, including some of what I think is the most intriguing type of feature in their images: craters with dark halos. Here's the original photo, which was taken as part of the huge, 99-frame high-resolution mosaic of Mercury's visible disk as MESSENGER departed from the flyby (here's the view from the dynamic visualization showing the geometry). In addition to the two prominently dark-haloed craters, there are some very nice rupes or scarps crossing the center of the photo.
But there's lots of other interesting stuff going on in this image besides the dark-halo craters. Here's a few of my impressions, which should be taken with a grain of salt; I've sketched a diagram below. There are some nice bluish rays from a recently formed impact crater just off the top of the scene. Also near the top of the scene, I think I see a sinuous channel (yellow) emptying into a crater; if it's real, and I'm not at all convinced that it is, it's probably of volcanic origin, like the sinuous channels on the Moon. Also, there's a very interesting field of craters near the upper right of the image, four very similar-sized craters in which two are almost entirely flattened out (most likely by being infilled with lava), and two are in a fairly pristine state complete with raised rims and hummocky floors. Across the image, craters are show a broad range of degradational states, which reflects both their age (older craters will be more degraded) and local geologic events (some craters are filled in with lava, some aren't). One thing that will make the interpretation of Mercury's surface age very challenging is the fact that although older craters are more likely to be infilled, by virtue of their being around longer, every filled-in crater is not necessarily older than every non-infilled crater; a non-infilled crater could also be relatively old, a lucky survivor in an area that happened not to experience a lava flow. Finally, my eye tracks some intriguing relationships between topography in the intercrater plains and reddish color, but I've got no interpretation for what that might mean.
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