Wells is an impact crater in the Eridania quadrangle on Mars at 60.2°S and 237.9°W. It measures approximately 98 kilometers in diameter. The crater was named after English writer H. G. Wells (1866–1946). The name was approved in 1973, by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature . [1]
Year | Metadata | Sections | Top Words | First Paragraph |
2018 |
73099 characters 2 sections 2 paragraphs 5 images 653 internal links 1 external links |
wells 0.547 237 0.338 1866 0.317 1946 0.296 writer 0.273 eridania 0.245 98 0.206 english 0.177 nomenclature 0.146 60 0.130 1973 0.128 measures 0.124 iau 0.122 working 0.117 approved 0.117 |
Wells is an impact crater in the Eridania quadrangle on Mars at 60.2°S and 237.9°W. It measures approximately 98 kilometers in diameter. The crater was named after English writer H. G. Wells (1866–1946). The name was approved in 1973, by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature . [1] |
|
2017 |
31704 characters 2 sections 2 paragraphs 8 images 158 internal links 1 external links |
wells 0.547 237 0.338 1866 0.317 1946 0.296 writer 0.273 eridania 0.245 98 0.206 english 0.177 nomenclature 0.146 60 0.130 1973 0.128 measures 0.124 iau 0.122 working 0.117 approved 0.117 |
Wells is an impact crater in the Eridania quadrangle on Mars at 60.2°S and 237.9°W. It measures approximately 98 kilometers in diameter. The crater was named after English writer H. G. Wells (1866–1946). The name was approved in 1973, by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature . [1] |
|
2015 |
30986 characters 2 sections 2 paragraphs 8 images 155 internal links 1 external links |
wells 0.622 237 0.385 103 0.318 eridania 0.278 wgpsn 0.259 nomenclature 0.166 60 0.148 1973 0.146 iau 0.139 working 0.133 approved 0.133 astronomical 0.116 union 0.114 crater 0.109 international 0.102 |
Wells Crater is an impact crater in the Eridania quadrangle on Mars at 60.2°S and 237.9°W, and it is 103.0 km in diameter. Its name was approved in 1973 by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature (WGPSN), and it was named after H. G. Wells . [1] |