Clif,
In response to your request for comments:
1. That's a nice mosaic of the Moon's south polar region.
2. It would be helpful to mention the time at which it was taken so
that the librations could be computed.
3. Yes, you have correctly identified what I was calling the
"keyhole", of which Malapert E is the larger (and lower) part.
4. The shadowed area you have labeled "Malapert" is actually the
crater now known as "Shoemaker" (which was, incidentally, the site of
the Lunar Prospector impact). It is labeled "R4" on Whitaker's sketch
map:
http://the-moon.wikispaces.com/Whitaker,+1954
Malapert is a somewhat poorly defined depression in front of it. The
rounded sunlit peak to the right of your Malapert label is what
Whitaker called "Malapert Alpha".
5. Your "South Pole" label is pointing roughly to the center of the
shadowed bowl of Shackleton. The Moon's rotation axis is actually
thought to penetrate the surface near its right-hand edge (close to
where it abuts the bright sunlit ridge shown in your photo):
http://the-moon.wikispaces.com/South+Pole
Whitaker shows a round crater of similar size near the south pole, but
what he has drawn is not Shackleton, and may not be a crater at all.
6. I am not at home at the moment, so it is slightly inconvenient for
me to check the librations (plus you forgot to mention the time), but
I believe Faustini is completely onto the visible disk in your image.
I believe you can see sunlight striking both its near and far rims.
The interior wall of the far rim is the first light streak immediately
under your "Faustini" label, and extends to the right where it becomes
broader near the "M" of "Malapert". The sunlit Earthward (outer) side
of the near rim is the next streak down below your "Faustini" label.
The shadowed bowl of Faustini is the dark area between the two. The
hypothetical impact site that Dr. Wooden will be practicing pointing
at this weekend will presumably be somewhere in this shadowed area,
although she has not responded to the question about whether her
"sweet spot" is the exact center of Faustini or some point offset from
it.
7. The impression of a depressed bowl along the limb, with the
Faustini label on its "floor" and, extending considerably to the left,
is probably created by the random association of unrelated peaks in
front of and behind the limb. It is unlikely to be a crater.
8. If the imaginary impact plume is expected to arise out of the
exact center of Faustini, then it should appear just slightly to the
left of your violet line to the "Keyhole" -- in the first dark band
that the line crosses below the "Faustini" label. I would be looking
at around pixel (633, 191) in the image as you posted it.
9. As to scale, Dr. Wooden has released some further details and a
different version of her IRTF slit-jaw image from Nov. 7th at :
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/LCROSS/news/NASA_Developing_Plans_to_Capture_Lunar_Impacts.html
and
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/LCROSS/news/image_specifications.html
where it is mentioned that the bright part of the actual LCROSS plume
is expected to rise no more than 4 km, which is only about 1/10th the
diameter of Faustini. That will make it a small target from Earth, but
not out of reach of the excellent resolution of your image.
10. I have been working on creating some web-pages related to the Dec.
6-8 (UT) training exercise:
http://ltvt.wikispaces.com/LCROSS+Dec+2008+Campaign
which you may or may not find helpful in locating Faustini, should you
have a chance this weekend. The pages are not completed yet, but the
one referenced above includes links to six existing amateur images
available on the web that show Faustini under similar lighting and
libration (at least in terms of how far Faustini will be onto the disk
-- not necessarily as to how it is skewed "horizontally") to the way
it will appear during the IRTF observations.
-- Jim