Mare Cognitum
Template:Infobox Lunar mare Mare Cognitum Template:IPAc-en (Latin cognitum, the "Sea that has Become Known") is a lunar mare located in a basin or large crater which sits in the second ring of Oceanus Procellarum. To the northwest of the mare is the Montes Riphaeus mountain range, part of the rim of the buried crater or basin containing the mare. Previously unnamed, the mare received its name in 1964 in reference to its selection as the target for the successful impact probe Ranger 7, the first American spacecraft to return closeup images of the Moon's surface.<ref name=gazetteer>Template:GPN</ref>
OriginEdit
The basin material is of the Pre-Nectarian epoch, while most of the basaltic mare material is of the Upper Imbrian epoch.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
ExplorationEdit
The Ranger 7 lunar probe impacted Mare Cognitum at the conclusion of its picture-taking mission.<ref name="Ranger 7">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Surveyor 3 and Apollo 12 landed near its northern shore.<ref>"Apollo 12 Preliminary Science Report", NASA Special Publication 235, 1970</ref> The outcrop of the Fra Mauro formation, where Apollo 14 landedTemplate:Citation needed, is also located near Mare Cognitum.
Statio CognitumEdit
On November 19, 1969, astronauts Pete Conrad and Alan Bean landed Apollo 12's Lunar Module within walking distance of Surveyor 3, which had been on the Moon since 1967. Named "Statio Cognitum"<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the site's closeness to its intended target demonstrated NASA's capability of precise lunar landings. The location also provided a relatively smooth Mare surface and a proximity to the lunar equator, thus ensuring relative ease of access from the standpoint of fuel consumption.<ref name="lpi">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Geologically, the astronauts noted the amount of glass contained in the regolith and present at the bottoms of shallow craters at the site, as well as lighter-colored regolith material that geologists later determined to be ejecta from Copernicus crater.<ref name=psr/> The Copernicus ejecta sampled suggested that the Copernicus impact occurred about 800 million years ago, but geologists believe the results of this analysis are inconclusive.<ref name=lpi2/> The Apollo 12 astronauts also noted the existence of small, shallow elongated depressions ("trenches" or "grooves") similar to those the Apollo 11 astronauts observed at Tranquility Base in the Sea of Tranquility; Shoemaker et al. preliminarily concluded in 1970 that these features reflected the direction and location of fractures in the underlying bedrock, into which fine-grained material settled, thereby creating the grooves.<ref name=psr>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Overall, Statio Cognitum and the surrounding area appears to have a slightly more red coloration from lunar orbit than Tranquility Base (which geologists later found to be the result of less titaniumTemplate:Citation needed in the Apollo 12 rocks) and to have fewer craters overall than Tranquility Base; because of this, geologists suspected the site chosen for Apollo 12 contained younger rocks than those of the Apollo 11 site, and this was confirmed by the samples returned by Apollo 12. These samples consisted of more basalts and fewer brecciasTemplate:Citation needed than the Apollo 11 samples and the basalts are about 500 million years younger than those from Tranquility base, the latter of which geologists estimate to be about 3.6 to 3.8 billion years old. The differing ages of the basalts collected on Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 demonstrate that the volcanic activity that formed the lunar mare did not occur all at once across the lunar surface, but rather took place at different times at different locations.<ref name=lpi2>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
Template:Lunar maria Template:Apollo landing sites {{#invoke:navbox|navbox | name = Apollo program | title = Apollo program | state = autocollapse | image = Emblem of the Apollo program | bodyclass = hlist | above =
| below =
- Symbol † indicates failure or partial failure
| group1 = Launch complexes | list1 =
| group2 = Ground facilities | list2 =
- Mission Control Center
- Cape Kennedy Air Force Station
- Crawler-transporter
- Kennedy Space Center
- Manned Space Flight Network
| group3 = Launch vehicles | list3 =
| group4 = Spacecraft and rover | list4 =
| group5 = Flights | list5 = {{#invoke:navbox|navbox|child
| group1 = Uncrewed | list1 =
| group2 = Crewed | list2 =
- Apollo 1†
- Apollo 7
- Apollo 8
- Apollo 9
- Apollo 10
- Apollo 11
- Apollo 12
- Apollo 13†
- Apollo 14
- Apollo 15
- Apollo 16
- Apollo 17
| group5 = Saturn
development
| list5 =
| group6 = Abort tests | list6 =
| group7 = Pegasus flights | list7 =
}}
|group6 = Apollo 8 specific |list6 =
|group7 = Apollo 11 specific |list7 =
- Command Module Columbia
- Lunar Module Eagle
- Tranquility Base
- Double crater
- Little West crater
- Goodwill messages
- Lunar sample displays
- Missing tapes
- Anniversaries
- In popular culture
|group8 = Apollo 12 specific |list8 =
- Statio Cognitum
- Bench Crater meteorite
- J002E3
- Moon Museum
- Reports of Streptococcus mitis on the Moon
|group9 = Apollo 13 specific |list9 =
|group10 = Apollo 14 specific |list10 =
|group11 = Apollo 15 specific |list11 =
- Journey
- Lunar operations
- Solo operations
- Return to Earth
- Hadley–Apennine
- Fallen Astronaut
- Genesis Rock
- Great Scott
- Hadley Rille meteorite
- Seatbelt basalt
- Postal covers incident
|group12 = Apollo 16 specific |list12 =
|group13 = Apollo 17 specific |list13 =
- The Blue Marble
- Taurus–Littrow
- Tracy's Rock
- Nansen-Apollo crater
- Shorty crater
- Lunar sample display
- Troctolite 76535
- Apollo Lunar Sounder Experiment
- Fe, Fi, Fo, Fum, and Phooey
|group14 = Post-Apollo
capsule use
|list14 =
|group15 = Related |list15 =