Following are the largest impact craters on various worlds of the Solar System . For a full list of named craters, see List of craters in the Solar System . The ratio column compares the crater diameter with the diameter of the impacted celestial body. The maximum crater diameter is 157% of the body diameter (the circumference along a great circle ).
More information Body, Crater ...
Body
Crater
Crater diameter
Body diameter
Ratio
Images
Notes
Mercury
Caloris
1,550 km (963 mi)
4,880 km
32%
Rembrandt
715 km (444 mi)
15%
Venus
Mead
280 km (170 mi)
12,100 km
2%
Earth
Vredefort
250–300 km (160–190 mi)
12,740 km
2%
Chicxulub crater
182 km (113 mi)
1.4%
Cause or contributor of the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event
Sudbury Basin
130 km (80 mi)
1%
Moon (moon of Earth)
Procellarum
3,000 km (2,000 mi)
3,470 km
86%
Not confirmed as an impact basin.
South Pole–Aitken basin
2,500 km (1,600 mi)
70%
Imbrium
1,145 km (711 mi)
33%
Mars
North Polar Basin
10,600 × 8,500 km (6,550 × 5,250 mi)
6,780 km
125–155%
Not confirmed as an impact basin
Utopia
3,300 km (2,100 mi) [ 1]
50%
Largest confirmed impact basin on Mars and in the Solar System
Hellas
2,300 km (1,400 mi)
34%
Largest visible crater in the Solar System
Isidis
~1,900 km (1,200 mi) [ 2]
28%
Heavily degraded to the northeast
Argyre
1,700 km (1,100 mi) [ 3]
25.1%
May have an outer ring 2750 km in diameter[ 3]
Vesta (asteroid )
Rheasilvia
505 km (310 mi)
529 km (569 km)[ 4]
90%[ 4]
Veneneia
395 km (250 mi)
70%[ 4]
Partially obscured by Rheasilvia
Ceres (dwarf planet )
Kerwan
284 km (180 mi) [ 5]
952 km
30%
Faint shallow crater, below the center of this image.
Yalode
271 km (170 mi) [ 5]
28%
Hygiea (asteroid)
Serpens
180± 15
434 ± 14 km
40%
Ganymede (moon of Jupiter)
Epigeus
343 km (213 mi)
5,270 km
6.5%
Callisto (moon of Jupiter)
Valhalla
360 km (224 mi)
4,820 km
7.5%
Heimdall
210 km (130 mi)
4%
(no good images have been taken)
Mimas (moon of Saturn)
Herschel
139 km (86 mi)
396 km
35%
Tethys (moon of Saturn)
Odysseus
445 km (277 mi)
1,060 km
42%
Dione (moon of Saturn)
Evander
350 km (220 mi) [ 6]
1,123 km
34%
Rhea (moon of Saturn)
Mamaldi
480 km (300 mi) [ 7]
1,530 km
31%
Tirawa
360 km (220 mi)
24%
Titan (moon of Saturn)
Menrva
392 km (244 mi)
5,150 km
7.5%
Iapetus (moon of Saturn)
Turgis
580 km (360 mi)
1,470 km
40%
Engelier
504 km (313 mi)
34%
Gerin
445 km (277 mi)
30%
Gerin is overlain by Engelier
Falsaron
424 km (263 mi)
29%
Titania (moon of Uranus)
Gertrude
326 km (203 mi)
1,580 km
21%
Little of Titania has been imaged, so it may well have larger craters.
Pluto (dwarf planet)
Sputnik Planitia basin
ca. 1,400 × 1,200 km[ 8] average: ~1,300 km
2,377 km
54.7%
Partially infilled by convecting Nitrogen ice, heavily eroded
Burney
296 km (184 mi)
12.5%
Heavily degraded, difficult to see
Charon (moon of Pluto)
Dorothy
ca. 261 km (162 mi)
1,207 km
21%
Crater at upper right overlapping Mordor Macula
Close
This article
needs additional citations for verification .
(March 2024 )