Today's image is a lovely color view of the impact crater Sor Juana. The crater interior contains smooth material, probably impact melt, that embays the central peak. The rim is relatively sharp, with well developed terraces. Sor Juana does not have its own rays - the bright ray patches containing chains and clusters of secondary craters that are dotted around the scene originated at Hokusai.
Sor Juana is named for Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz (Sister Joan Agnes of the Cross), a nun and poet who lived from 1651 to 1695 in what is now Mexico. Some authorities consider her body of work to be the most important in North America until the arrival of 19th Century poets such as Dickinson and Whitman.
This image was acquired as a high-resolution targeted color observation. Targeted color observations are images of a small area on Mercury's surface at resolutions higher than the 1-kilometer/pixel 8-color base map. During MESSENGER's one-year primary mission, hundreds of targeted color observations were obtained. During MESSENGER's extended mission, high-resolution targeted color observations are more rare, as the 3-color base map covered Mercury's northern hemisphere with the highest-resolution color images that are possible.
Date acquired: April 07, 2011
Image Mission Elapsed Time (MET): 210677654, 210677650, 210677646
Image ID: 102052, 102051, 102050
Instrument: Wide Angle Camera (WAC) of the Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS)
WAC filters: 9, 7, 6 (996, 748, 433 nanometers) in red, green, and blue
Center Latitude: 50.8°
Center Longitude: 333.8° E
Resolution: 224 meters/pixel
Scale: Sor Juana crater is about 94 km (58 mi.) in diameter
Incidence Angle: 50.9°
Emission Angle: 1.4°
Phase Angle: 52.3°
North is up in this image.
Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington