Mie (crater)

Mie Crater is an impact crater on Mars , located in the Cebrenia quadrangle at 48.5°N latitude and 220.4°W longitude. It measures 104 kilometers in diameter and named after Gustav Mie . The name was approved by IAU's Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature in 1973. [1]

Page Revisions

Year Metadata Sections Top Words First Paragraph
2018

71308 characters

2 sections

1 paragraphs

3 images

652 internal links

1 external links

1. See also

2. References

mie 0.696

gustav 0.371

cebrenia 0.271

104 0.247

220 0.225

48 0.170

nomenclature 0.146

1973 0.128

measures 0.125

iau 0.123

working 0.118

approved 0.117

longitude 0.101

crater 0.096

kilometers 0.095

Mie Crater is an impact crater on Mars , located in the Cebrenia quadrangle at 48.5°N latitude and 220.4°W longitude. It measures 104 kilometers in diameter and named after Gustav Mie . The name was approved by IAU's Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature in 1973. [1]

2017

9287 characters

2 sections

2 paragraphs

3 images

18 internal links

1 external links

1. See also

2. References

mie 0.696

gustav 0.371

cebrenia 0.271

104 0.247

220 0.225

48 0.170

nomenclature 0.146

1973 0.128

measures 0.125

iau 0.123

working 0.118

approved 0.117

longitude 0.101

crater 0.096

kilometers 0.095

Mie Crater is an impact crater on Mars , located in the Cebrenia quadrangle at 48.5°N latitude and 220.4°W longitude. It measures 104 kilometers in diameter and named after Gustav Mie . The name was approved by IAU's Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature in 1973. [1]

2015

5661 characters

2 sections

1 paragraphs

1 images

7 internal links

1 external links

1. See also

2. References

mie 0.676

gustav 0.360

cebrenia 0.263

104 0.240

wgpsn 0.222

220 0.219

48 0.165

nomenclature 0.142

1973 0.125

iau 0.119

working 0.114

approved 0.114

astronomical 0.099

longitude 0.098

union 0.097

Mie Crater is an impact crater in the Cebrenia quadrangle of Mars, located at 48.5°N latitude and 220.4°W longitude. It is 104.0  km in diameter and was named after Gustav Mie , and the name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN). [1]