Mass concentration (astronomy)

Topography (top) and corresponding gravity (bottom) signal of Mare Smythii on the Moon containing a significant mascon.

In astronomy, astrophysics and geophysics, a mass concentration (or mascon) is a region of a planet's or moon's crust that contains a large positive gravity anomaly. In general, the word "mascon" can be used as a noun to refer to an excess distribution of mass on or beneath the surface of an astronomical body (compared to some suitable average), such as is found around Hawaii on Earth.[1] However, this term is most often used to describe a geologic structure that has a positive gravitational anomaly associated with a feature (e.g. depressed basin) that might otherwise have been expected to have a negative anomaly, such as the "mascon basins" on the Moon.

  1. ^ Richard Allen. "Gravitational Constraints (Lecture 17)" (PDF). Berkeley course: Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors. p. 9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-12-28. Retrieved 2009-12-25.

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