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Nawish (crater)
Crater on Ceres / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nawish is a crater on the dwarf planet Ceres. It is named after the Acoma guardian of the field. The name was officially approved by the International Astronomical Union (IAU) on 3 July 2015.[1] It is the namesake of the Nawish Quadrangle.[2]
Quick Facts Location, Coordinates ...
![]() Nawish (bottom) and Ezinu (top). Nawish's non-circular shape is apparent, likely due to multiple landslides shaping its crater rim | |
Location | Nawish Quadrangle, Ceres |
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Coordinates | 18.28°N 193.79°E / 18.28; 193.79[1] |
Diameter | 77 kilometres (48 mi) |
Discoverer | Dawn |
Eponym | Acoma guardian of the field |
Close
Nawish is medium in size, at roughly 77 kilometers in diameter.[1] In contrast to most craters, its shape is not circular. This is likely the result of mass wasting processes such as landslides that collapsed sections of the crater wall. As with most craters of its size on Ceres, Nawish has a central peak; its central peak is roughly 20 kilometers wide and 1 kilometer tall, and it hosts a central pit that is roughly 8 kilometers wide and deeper than Nawish's crater floor by about a kilometer.[2]
![Thumb image](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/80/Ezinu_and_Nawish_craters_in_context.jpg/640px-Ezinu_and_Nawish_craters_in_context.jpg)