An impact crater doesn’t work like someone throwing a rock into the sand with the crater being the result of that rock shoving the sand away.
Meteors come in at speeds of several km per second. When it suddenly stops because it hits the ground all that kinetic energy is converted into heat and spreads outwards in a massive explosion that expands in a circle. In a way they’re more like bomb craters than “throw a rock into the sand” crater.
You very very rarely get elliptical craters if the meteor comes in at an extremely shallow angle of less than 5 degrees.
Scientists were confused by the shape of craters for a while. After some math and tests they figured it out. If the energy an object hits something with is more than the energy holding the object together, the object breaks apart instantly and creates a circle instead of an elliptical or elongated impact. A similar example is a snowball. If a snowball hits a wall it breaks apart in a circle when it hits something rather than what you might expect.
The kinetic energy of the object impacting the moon is larger than the energy holding the object together. So the object explodes instead of deforming into the surface of the moon.
You can do this by throwing snowballs at walls. Regardless of the angle. As long as you throw it hard enough, it will always leave a circle of snow on the wall.
ELI5: The object is moving so fast that it shatters like glass instead of smushing like play-doh.
You would think, but that’s not how high velocity impacts work. It works more like throwing a pebble in a pond than in a pit of sand, the energies are so high the rock behaves like liquid and quite a lot of it outright vaporizes. Of course if the angle is very shallow you do get elliptical craters, but reasonably high angle impacts are all pretty circular.
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