Kittu (crater)
The crater Kittu, imaged by the Galileo spacecraft on April 5, 1997. | |
| Feature type | Dark ray crater |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 0°24′N 334°36′W / 0.4°N 334.6°W |
| Diameter | 15.0 kilometres (9.3 mi) |
| Eponym | Kittu |
Kittu crater is a small crater on Jupiter's moon Ganymede. It is approximately 15 km (9.3 mi) in diameter and it exhibits a dark ray system which is rare on Ganymede.
Naming
Kittu is named after the Mesopotamian goddess Kittu (also known as Kittum). She was the goddess of truth, justice and the law in Assyro-Babylonian mythology. The International Astronomical Union (IAU) has ruled that craters and features on Ganymede's surface be named after deities, heroes and places from Ancient Middle Eastern mythology, which includes Mesopotamian mythology. The IAU approved Kittu's name in 1985.[1]
Location
Kittu is located north of Nicholson Regio, and east of Barnard Regio along Ganymede's equator within the chaotic, grooved terrain of Mysia Sulcus.[2]
It is a part of the Misharu quadrangle of Ganymede (designated Jg10). A crater with the same name as the quadrangle lies to the south of Kittu.[3]
Kitt is located on the side of Ganymede that is always facing Jupiter—a result of the moon's synchronous rotation—near its Subjovian point (i.e. the point on a moon directly facing Jupiter where the planet will always be overhead). This means that an observer standing inside Kittu crater will always see Jupiter almost overhead at all times.
Geology
Kittu exhibits a bright, white central peak and rim, but it is surrounded by dark, brownish materials. The diffused, dark rays emanating from the impact site are sprinkled thinly atop the surrounding grooved terrain. The dark material of the rays dusted across the surface is probably part of a dark impactor (an asteroid or comet) that contaminated the water ice that were strewn across the surface upon impact.[4] As time went on, these dark materials started absorbing more heat from sunlight compared to the surrounding, brighter areas. This causes water ice molecules—which reflect a lot of sunlight—to evaporate and preferentially condense around brighter areas elsewhere since bright areas reflect more sunlight. This causes the dark areas to remain dark.[5] A similar process is happening on Saturn's moon, Iapetus.
Because of these dark ejecta, Kittu is classified as a dark-ray crater.[6] Other examples of dark-ray craters on Ganymede are Khensu and Nergal.
The impactor hit one of Ganymede's grooved terrain and a straight segment of the crater's rim was created when a portion of the rim collapsed as it conformed to the trend of the older fault line.[7]
To the south is a larger crater named Misharu, the namesake of the Misharu quadrangle. Dozens of bright ray craters and halo craters surround Kittu, but they are all unnamed and their rays and halos are relatively faint compared to brighter ray craters like Tros or Enkidu.
Observation and Exploration
Kittu is a relatively small and dark crater which makes it difficult to see. Only a few probes were able to image Kittu with enough details.
The Voyager 1 was the first probe to get a decent image of Kittu in March 1979. However, it was not until the Galileo probe—which orbited Jupiter from December 1995 to September 2003—that the first high-resolution images of Kittu were taken.
In June 2021, the Juno spacecraft performed a close flyby of Ganymede during its 34th perijove to adjust its orbit around Jupiter. It was able to take decent photographs of the dark-ray crater.
Gallery
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An enhanced color image of Ganymede showing Kittu crater (dark spot at the center), taken by Voyager 1.
References
- ^ "GANYMEDE – Kittu". USGS. 2015.
- ^ "Geologic Maps of the Dardanus Sulcus (Jg-6), Misharu (Jg-10), Nabu (Jg-11), and Namtar (Jg-14) Quadrangles of Ganymede" (PDF). USGS. 2001. Retrieved 2025-12-16.
- ^ Ganymede Map Images Archived 2007-11-19 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Kittu Dark Ray Crater". NASA/JPL. 1998. Retrieved 2025-12-12.
- ^ "A Striking Crater on Jupiter's Moon Ganymede". NASA. 2022. Retrieved 2025-12-05.
- ^ "Ray and Halo Impact Craters on Ganymede: Fingerprint for Decoding Ganymede's Crustal Structure". Harvard University/AGU. 2024. Retrieved 2025-12-12.
- ^ "Kittu Dark Ray Crater". NASA/JPL. 1998. Retrieved 2025-12-05.