Detection, classification and mapping of rilles in the northern hemisphere of the Moon

Fiorucci S., Podda S., Collu C., Brunetti M.T., Melis M.T., Scaioni M., 2019, Detection, classification and mapping of rilles in the northern hemisphere of the Moon, XV Congresso Nazionale di Scienze Planetarie, pp. 66–66, Firenze, 4-8/2/2019,
URL: http://www.cnr.it/prodotto/i/415506

Lunar rilles are any of the long, narrow depressions on the surface of the Moon. These structures have different characteristics, which are related to their origin. Here, a classification of the lunar rilles in different groups with similar morphometric features and likely the same formation mechanisms is proposed. The detection, classification and mapping of lunar rilles has been achieved in two quadrants of the northern hemisphere, which are located between -90°E to 90°E longitude and 0°N to 60°N latitude. For the detection and mapping of rilles, we used images from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) [1] which have a resolution of 100 m/pixel and the DEM from Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter (LOLA) [2] with a resolution of 6 m/pixel. Lunar rilles include generic sinuous rilles (SR), cracks on lava deposits (CL), surface lava flows (LF), subsurface lava tubes or catena (crater chains, CC) and tectonic structures (TS). For each type of the classified structures, morphologic parameters, i.e. length, width, perimeter, area, depth, longitude and latitude have been measured in order to allow a better understanding of how these features formed [3]. For those sinuous rilles classified as remnants of shallow lava channels or subsurface collapsed lava tubes, morphometric analysis included the extraction of the sinuosity index and of the regional slope and azimuth. This work is born inside an international cooperation between Italy and China called "Moon Mapping project" for the cooperation between Italian and Chinese college students [4].

Data from https://intranet.cnr.it/people/