16 craters on Ceres now have official names
http://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/SearchResults?target=CERES&featureType=Crater%2C%20craters
The crater with the main bright spots is now named Occator
I'm working on a quick map with the names
And here's that map with names (the mosaic map by Steve Albers)
I guess that makes them the Occator spots. Could the spots themselves receive a name, as an albedo feature or something?
Nice map.
Trying to get my head around how to pronounce the Spot 5 crater, I googled the name. Lots and lots of results identifying Occator as the God of the Harrow (or hoeing, in modern parlance), whose spirit was invoked by priests of Ceres, but very little with useful pronunciation guides.
What little I found suggests it is pronounced ah-CATE-ore. Not OCK-a-tore.
it's Strange. Im don't result occator in roman divinitY. ...
I think there's a fair chance the first syllable is a long o and the penultimate is stressed.
And in Latin, the "a" should be pronounced as in "cat", and not as in "cake".
In the Latin (http://archimedes.fas.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/dict?name=ls&lang=la&word=occator&) the first syllable is a short o but the second is a long a, so the accent falls on the penult (/oˈkaː.tor/). The https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_English_pronunciation_of_Latin would then be /ə(ʊ)ˈkeiː.tər/, or either oh-KAY-ter or uh-KAY-ter; a close analogue would be the first syllable of "Olympus" and the next two syllables as in "crater" but without the 'r.'
If I were a planetary scientist, I probably wouldn't want to butcher fossae and chasma and mare and all the rest either. Luckily, I can just write them on the internets.
I've mentioned it before and will do so again here now that there is a Ceres Nomenclature thread....
I hope the powers-that-be consider the name 'Corn Palace' for the large mountain. Even though the name sounds a bit corny (no pun intended ), it is the name of an agricultural festival in Mitchell, South Dakota (which I think would satisfy the nomenclatural rules for Cerean non-crater features), and both the mountain and festival's name-sake structure have imposing edifices.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_Palace
I am not satisfied with some names .. :-/
I hope in a Fossae name Like "Caereris Mundus", a Fossae that was open only three days a year in ancient Rome..
There is a new name for Ceres. The large impact basin shown in http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19591 is now named Urvara. This is the updated map:
Urvara hmm, not Finnish unless misspelled, so my bet it's from India.
Something http://www.thenamemeaning.com/urvara/ about the name "Urvara" meaning "fertile earth" in Hindi.
Another new name, http://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/Feature/15361. Looks like it's marking the prime meridian.
The IAU have their own host a map here: http://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/images/ceres.pdf
More features have been named. I'll make a new name map later this morning, but one highlight is that the a mountain on Ceres now has a name, Ysolo Mons.
As can be seen on the map I posted above (which has now been updated), the named mountain is in the north pole area. The big mountain is still unnamed.
That wasn't updated when I saw it this morning. Well, I guess that's one less thing for me to do this morning
It's odd that they haven't given that mountain a name. Maybe they are trying to understand more about it before giving it one?
These were names approved a few days ago. Here's a link to the USGS page:
http://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/Page/CERES/target
From there you can get lists of the nomenclature approved for Ceres, including the new names (all the ones approved on September 21), as well as a map, which as Habukaz pointed out, has been updated to include the newly named features.
Didn't notice it until now: the big mountain is now officially named Ahuna Mons. The map in my previous link has been updated.
http://astrogeology.usgs.gov/news/nomenclature/names-approved-for-13-features-on-ceres
The bright spots in Occator have now been http://astrogeology.usgs.gov/news/nomenclature/names-approved-for-bright-spots-on-ceres. As usual, https://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/images/ceres.pdf has been updated.
The central bright spot has been name Cerealia Facula while the eastern cluster of bright spots has been named Vinalia Faculae.
Also, Ysolo Mons has been http://astrogeology.usgs.gov/news/nomenclature/name-changed-on-ceres Yamor Mons for some reason.
I was curious about the name change and found this from someone who goes by the name Mark Dominus.
http://blog.plover.com/wikipedia/ysolo-2.html
"I contacted the United States Geological Survey to point out the hoax, and on Wednesday I got the following news from their representative:
Thank you for your email alerting us to the possibility that the name Ysolo, as a festival name, may be fictitious.
After some research, we agreed with your assessment. The IAU and the Dawn Team discussed the matter and decided that the best solution was to replace the name Ysolo Mons with Yamor Mons, named for the corn/maize festival in Ecuador. The WGPSN voted to approve the change.
Thank you for bringing the matter to our attention."
Ouch. I see now that someone https://twitter.com/EdvinParruca/status/649922193237929984 already back in October last year. The https://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/Feature/15372 for Ysolo Mons also seems to use an entry on some kind of blog as reference, which would be a rather bad idea. I wonder if there are other places in the solar system named after hoaxes.
you have an image of " Yamor Mons " ?
I guess this can fit here since it involves mapping. I made a color 32K map of Ceres from LAMO/HAMO/ and SO data found in the PDS (for some reason the USGS has yet to publish the LAMO map on Astropedia)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/60012030@N02/albums/72157718028081858
Preview below (had to be divided into 4 sections since 2 was too big of picture for Flickrs 200 mb limit.
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