Hippalus: Sunken crater with Arcuate Rilles
Who knew arcuate rilles were a thing? Now I do.
Observer Comments
| Target Description | Hippalus Crater is nearly sunken into the mare. But it is known for its arcurate rilles. What's that, you ask? Arcuate rilles have a smooth curve and are found on the edges of the dark lunar maria. They formed when the lava flows that filled the mare cooled, contracted, and sank Now you know! I had no idea until I researched this target. |
| Image Capture Description | Technically, this is the best lunar observation in this submission (at least so far). It takes advantage of the EdgeHD at full 2032mm focal length and 294 camera. This was my first experience with SharpCap's real-time lucky imaging. I had turned to it out of desperation because wildfire smoke had ruined multiple observing nights for much of the summer. Smoke turned the original image bright yellow (I converted it to grayscale). Despite the poor transparency, the combination of much longer focal length, lucky-image stacking, and wavelet sharpening delivers a much more detailed image than any of the Seestar captures. |
| Program Links | <Previous | Lunar Program Listings | Next> |
| Date and Time Observed | 2024-09-13 21:56:00 |
| Phase Age | 10.5 days |
| Lunar Phase | Waxing Gibbous |
| Illumination | 78% |
| Conditions | Transparency: Poor. Seeing: Good. |
| Obs. Lat/Long | 42° 17', 073° 57' |
| Capture Software | SharpCap |
| Capture Type | Real-time lucky imaging with wavelet sharpening |
| Instrument | EdgeHD 8" f10-2,032mm FL |
| Camera | ASI294MC-Pro |
| Capture Details | Approximately 20 images stacked 50ms exposures |
| Post Processing | Leveled and sharpened in Affinity Photo |







