The Lunar 100
But the night sky offers an object that is larger, brighter, and more visually captivating than anything on Messier's list: the Moon. Yet many backyard astronomers never go beyond the astro-tourist stage to acquire the knowledge and understanding necessary to really appreciate what they're looking at, and how magnificent and amazing it truly is. Perhaps this is because after they identify a few of the Moon's most conspicuous features, many amateurs don't know where to look next.
The Lunar 100 list is an attempt to provide Moon lovers with something akin to what deep-sky observers enjoy with the Messier catalog: a selection of telescopic sights to ignite interest and enhance understanding. Presented here is a selection of the Moon's 100 most interesting regions, craters, basins, mountains, rilles, and domes. I challenge observers to find and observe them all and, more important, to consider what each feature tells us about lunar and Earth history.
Anatomy of the Lunar 100
Objects in the Lunar 100 are arranged from the easiest to view to the most difficult. This is more systematic than the haphazard approach that produced the Messier list. Indeed, just by knowing a feature's Lunar 100 number, you have some idea of how easy or challenging it will be to see. For example, the Moon itself is L1, while L2 is earthshine and L3 is the light/dark dichotomy between lunar highlands and maria ("seas"). I'd be surprised if anyone reading this couldn't tick those off the list right now. Higher-numbered objects are smaller, less conspicuous, or positioned closer to the limb, making them more challenging to locate and view.
How big a telescope do you need to view the Lunar 100? The smallest features listed are 3 kilometers in diameter and thus nominally visible in 3-inch (75-millimeter) telescopes employing magnifications of about 150× to 200×. And many can be found with smaller scopes at lower power. But a few Lunar 100 objects — such as narrow rilles — are best seen with 6- or 8-inch telescopes used at high power. The goal, however, is not just to find the objects, but to understand what they tell us abut the Moon.
Any selection of lunar features is bound to lead to many difficult judgments, and I'm sure that at least a few of my choices and rankings will generate considerable debate. Some of my choices were obvious, some were not. Some were influenced by my personal sense of what crater appears more dramatic than another, or which rille best demonstrates an aspect of the Moon's evolution. Aesthetics aside, my choices were principally governed by a desire to include features that tell us something important or interesting about the Moon itself.
I invite you to use the Lunar 100 to guide your explorations of the Moon. The complete list appears on the next 5 pages of this article. I'll provide complete descriptions of all 100 features in my "Exploring the Moon" column beginning with the May 2004 issue of Sky & Telescope.





