![]() Kertész is the big crater with bright floor and dark halo.  | |
| Planet | Mercury | 
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 27°22′N 213°53′W / 27.36°N 213.89°W | 
| Quadrangle | Raditladi | 
| Diameter | 32 km | 
| Eponym | André Kertész | 
Located in the western edge of Mercury's giant Caloris basin, Kertész crater (named in 2008 for André Kertész, a Hungarian-born American photographer)[1] has some unusual, bright material located on its floor. Sander crater, located in the northwestern edge of Caloris basin, also shows bright material on its floor. Just northeast of Kertész a small crater has very bright rays and ejecta, indicating that the crater is young.[2]
Hollows
Hollows cover the entire crater floor, parts of the central peaks, and the southern rim slope.
High-resolution mosaic
The hollows cover the crater floor
Another detail of the hollows
References
- ↑ "Kertész (crater)". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
 - ↑ MESSENGER Captures a Shot of Kertész Archived 2014-08-09 at the Wayback Machine (on Photojournal site)
 
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