English: Date acquired: April 01, 2012
- Image Mission Elapsed Time (MET): 241789276
- Image ID: 1592870
- Instrument: Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) of the Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS)
- Center Latitude: -36.80°
- Center Longitude: 270.2° E
- Resolution: 222 meters/pixel
- Scale: The diameter of Carducci is 108 kilometers (67 miles)
- Incidence Angle: 54.8°
- Emission Angle: 4.4°
- Phase Angle: 59.3°
Of Interest: This image shows two craters that formed from impacts on Mercury's surface at a very similar location. The largest crater in this image is named Carducci, in honor of the Italian poet Giosue Carducci (1835-1907). The smaller crater that is located near the center of Carducci has a diameter of approximately 20 kilometers. We can deduce that the smaller crater is younger than Carducci because the impact that formed the smaller crater destroyed a portion of Carducci's central peaks and a large impact crater like Carducci would have obliterated any evidence of the smaller crater if the smaller crater had existed previously. Simple superposition relationships like this are being applied all over Mercury's surface, to determine the relative age and timing of events in Mercury's past.
This image was acquired as part of MDIS's high-resolution albedo base map. The best images for discerning variations in albedo, or brightness, on the surface are acquired when the Sun is overhead, so these images typically are taken with low incidence angles. The albedo base map is a major mapping campaign in MESSENGER's extended mission and will cover Mercury's surface at an average resolution of 200 meters/pixel.