I can't offer you images of the
Super Blue Blood Moon since I was located too far east to see totality. Instead I can just give you a photo of three lunar craters: Tycho, Maginus, and Clavius. As you can see by the lack of other craters inside Tycho, it is a relatively young feature. The central peak is close to 1 mile high. And in 1968 Surveyor 7 landed just north of the crater's rim (to the top of the photo). The eroded rims and crater-pocked interior indicate that Maginus is ancient. Clavius is enormous, the third largest visible crater, and is also one of the older formations on the Moon, an estimated 4 billion year old.
Technical Details:
Scope: Starblast 4.5; tracking on
Magnification: ~150x
Camera: iPhone6 using NightCap Pro; ISO 32
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