by Galactic Groove » Wed Oct 10, 2007 6:24 pm
the mentioning of the north side slopes north of the equator and the south side slopes south of the equator being darker than their counters only holds true in the "transition zone." look away from this area and you'll see the craters fully dark or white (depending on which side of the transition you're looking at). If there was any evaporation taking place, then the entire white face of the moon would show greater signs of it, not just the slopes of the craters in this transition zone.
Also, is it 100% accurate that the dark side always trails like the caption says? if so, then it's all the more likely that the moon passed through some debris cloud or ring exactly like Danielallman is saying (and others). The slopes facing the debris as it went through would collect it while the slopes that didn't meet the debris head-on would collect very little.
If it did pass through a debris ring around Saturn, the craters in the white zone that are showing dark impacts would be more recent than this event since they didn't get the chance to be fully covered with the debris, if at all. The white peaks in the middle of these craters could still be in a position to collect the debris as it passed through since they are sticking out and more exposed unlike the surrounding valley below the peak which is protected by the crater walls. Simply because it's a depression in the main body of the moon, they are removed from this exposure to the debris.
the mentioning of the north side slopes north of the equator and the south side slopes south of the equator being darker than their counters only holds true in the "transition zone." look away from this area and you'll see the craters fully dark or white (depending on which side of the transition you're looking at). If there was any evaporation taking place, then the entire white face of the moon would show greater signs of it, not just the slopes of the craters in this transition zone.
Also, is it 100% accurate that the dark side always trails like the caption says? if so, then it's all the more likely that the moon passed through some debris cloud or ring exactly like Danielallman is saying (and others). The slopes facing the debris as it went through would collect it while the slopes that didn't meet the debris head-on would collect very little.
If it did pass through a debris ring around Saturn, the craters in the white zone that are showing dark impacts would be more recent than this event since they didn't get the chance to be fully covered with the debris, if at all. The white peaks in the middle of these craters could still be in a position to collect the debris as it passed through since they are sticking out and more exposed unlike the surrounding valley below the peak which is protected by the crater walls. Simply because it's a depression in the main body of the moon, they are removed from this exposure to the debris.