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Glossary term: Crater

Description: A crater is a circular depression in the surface of a solid planet, moon, or other small object in space. Some craters are volcanic, especially on Earth and Venus, but most are impact craters, caused by the impact of a large space rock or comet nucleus. There are dozens of impact craters on the surface of Earth, and thousands on the Moon. The maria, the large, darker, circular features on the Moon are giant impact craters, formed billions of years ago, and then filled with lava, which has since solidified.

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Term and definition status: This term and its definition have been approved by a research astronomer and a teacher

The OAE Multilingual Glossary is a project of the IAU Office of Astronomy for Education (OAE) in collaboration with the IAU Office of Astronomy Outreach (OAO). The terms and definitions were chosen, written and reviewed by a collective effort from the OAE, the OAE Centers and Nodes, the OAE National Astronomy Education Coordinators (NAECs) and other volunteers. You can find a full list of credits here. All glossary terms and their definitions are released under a Creative Commons CC BY-4.0 license and should be credited to "IAU OAE".

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The asteroid Ceres, roughly spherical with a grey surface, many craters, some of which reveal white subsurface water ice.

Ceres

Caption: True-colour image of the asteroid Ceres acquired by the spaceprobe Dawn in May 2015, at a distance of 13641 km. The prominent, bright crater at right is Haulani. The smaller bright spot to its left is exposed on the floor of Oxo. Ejecta from these impacts appears to have exposed bright material, probably water ice.
Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / UCLA / MPS / DLR / IDA / Justin Cowart

License: CC-BY-2.0 Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic icons

Related Activities


Impact Craters

Impact Craters

astroEDU educational activity (links to astroEDU website)
Description: A literal Earth-Shattering experiment

License: CC-BY-4.0 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) icons

Tags: History , Impact , Experiment
Age Ranges: 10-12 , 12-14 , 14-16
Education Level: Middle School , Primary , Secondary
Areas of Learning: Guided-discovery learning , Modelling , Traditional Science Experiment
Costs: Low Cost
Duration: 1 hour
Group Size: Group
Skills: Analysing and interpreting data , Asking questions , Constructing explanations , Engaging in argument from evidence , Using mathematics and computational thinking

Meteoroids, Meteors and Meteorites

Meteoroids, Meteors and Meteorites

astroEDU educational activity (links to astroEDU website)
Description: Unveiling the mystery of "shooting stars": meteors, meteorites and meteroids

License: CC-BY-4.0 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) icons

Tags: Geology
Age Ranges: 6-8 , 8-10 , 10-12 , 12-14
Education Level: Middle School , Primary
Areas of Learning: Interactive Lecture
Costs: Low Cost
Duration: 1 hour 30 mins
Group Size: Group
Skills: Analysing and interpreting data , Asking questions , Communicating information , Engaging in argument from evidence

Age that crater!

Age that crater!

astroEDU educational activity (links to astroEDU website)
Description: Learn how to age craters with this Predict, Explain, Observe, Explain Activity!

License: CC-BY-4.0 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) icons

Tags: Craters , Game , Maps , Geology
Age Ranges: 4-6 , 6-8 , 8-10
Education Level: Middle School , Primary
Areas of Learning: Observation based , Social Research
Costs: Low Cost
Duration: 1 hour
Group Size: Group
Skills: Asking questions , Communicating information , Constructing explanations , Developing and using models , Engaging in argument from evidence