Adams Crater is an impact crater in the Cebrenia quadrangle of Mars, located at 31.1°N latitude and 197.0°W longitude. It is 94.9 km in diameter and was named after Walter Sydney Adams , and the name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN). [1]
Year | Metadata | Sections | Top Words | First Paragraph |
2018 |
71929 characters 2 sections 3 paragraphs 2 images 650 internal links 2 external links |
adams 0.666 elysium 0.225 sydney 0.214 lockyer 0.196 phlegra 0.184 hecates 0.171 walter 0.164 197 0.164 hemisphere 0.161 cebrenia 0.157 crater 0.139 tholus 0.137 94 0.137 southern 0.133 wgpsn 0.132 |
Adams Crater is an impact crater in the Cebrenia quadrangle of Mars, located at 31.1°N latitude and 197.0°W longitude. It is 94.9 km in diameter and was named after Walter Sydney Adams , and the name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN). [1] |
|
2017 |
30559 characters 2 sections 3 paragraphs 5 images 160 internal links 2 external links |
adams 0.666 elysium 0.225 sydney 0.214 lockyer 0.196 phlegra 0.184 hecates 0.171 walter 0.164 197 0.164 hemisphere 0.161 cebrenia 0.157 crater 0.139 tholus 0.137 94 0.137 southern 0.133 wgpsn 0.132 |
Adams Crater is an impact crater in the Cebrenia quadrangle of Mars, located at 31.1°N latitude and 197.0°W longitude. It is 94.9 km in diameter and was named after Walter Sydney Adams , and the name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN). [1] |
|
2015 |
27298 characters 2 sections 1 paragraphs 5 images 149 internal links 1 external links |
adams 0.574 sydney 0.369 walter 0.283 197 0.283 cebrenia 0.270 94 0.236 wgpsn 0.228 31 0.146 nomenclature 0.146 1973 0.128 iau 0.122 working 0.117 approved 0.117 astronomical 0.102 longitude 0.101 |
Adams Crater is an impact crater in the Cebrenia quadrangle of Mars, located at 31.1°N latitude and 197.0°W longitude. It is 94.9 km in diameter and was named after Walter Sydney Adams , and the name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN). [1] |