Debussy is a rayed impact crater on Mercury, which was discovered in 1969 by low resolution ground-based radar observations obtained by the Goldstone Observatory.
[3] The bright appearance of rays in the radar images indicates that the crater is geologically young, because fresh and rough surfaces of young impact craters are good scatterers of radio waves.
[1] It has a diameter of about 85 km, while the rays extend hundreds of kilometers, covering much of the southern hemisphere.
[2] The ray system of Debussy is the second most prominent on Mercury after that of Hokusai.
[4] This crater is a prominent feature in the first photograph taken from Mercury orbit, taken on March 29, 2011 by the MESSENGER spacecraft, pictured below.