A Blue-Green World

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A Blue-Green World. Uranus is the third largest planet after Jupiter and Saturn. Uranus has 21 moons and small, dusty rings. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of A Blue-Green World

Uranus is the third largest planet after Jupiter and Saturn. Uranus has 21 moons and small, dusty rings.

Voyager 2 acquired this view of the seventh planet while departing the Uranian system in late January 1986. This image looks at the planet approximately along its rotational pole.

A Blue-Green World

Voyager 2 image of Uranus, 1986 (Image:NASA)

Uranus has a thick hydrogen-methane atmosphere. Methane causes the planet’s blue-green color. Some astronomers call Uranus and Neptune ‘ice giants’ because most of their mass is ice and some rocky material.

It appears that Uranus does not have a rocky core like Jupiter and Saturn but rather that its material is more or less uniformly distributed.

A Blue-Green World

This image, taken by Hubble, clearly shows Uranus and its rings.

Uranus’ rings are smaller and dustier than those of Saturn, and will eventually dissipate.

Hubble’s View

Image: NASA

Deep exposure of Uranus taken with the Hubble Space Telescope reveal two small moons and two faint rings.  All orbit outside of Uranus's previously known (main) ring system, but interior to the large, classical moons.

This image reveals many broad lanes of dust surrounding the 9 main rings of Uranus. It was taken by Voyager 2 looking back toward the sun through the ring system.

Dusty Rings

Uranus moves around the Sun with its rotation axis is perpendicular to its orbit around the sun.

It is thought that a planet-sized body hit Uranus early in its history, “tipping” it over. Because of this, Uranus’ seasons last over 20 years!

Tipsy?

Distance from Sun 1.7 Billion Miles 93 Million Miles

Diameter 32,000 Miles 7926 Miles

Length of Year 84 Earth Years 365.25 Days

Length of Day 17.24 hours 23 hours 56 minutes

Gravity .89 that of Earth 2.66 times that of Mars

Temperature Average -319 degrees F Average 57 degrees F

Number of Moons 27 1

EarthUranus

George’s Star

• Uranus was discovered by William Herschel, the British royal astronomer, in 1781.

• Herschel thought the planet was a comet at first!

• He tried to name it “George’s Star” after King George.

The name "Uranus" was eventually proposed in order to conform with the other planetary names from classical mythology. The name didn't come into common use until 1850.

To the ancient Greeks, Uranus was god of the sky and heavens.

God of the Sky

Missions

Only one spacecraft has visited Uranus. On Jan. 24, 1986 Voyager 2 passed within 50,600 miles.

Voyager 2 radioed images and scientific data on the planet, its moons, rings, atmosphere, interior and the magnetic environment surrounding Uranus.

Uranus has 5 medium-sized moons and 21 smaller moons.

The five main satellites are Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Tatania and Oberon.

MirandaAriel

OberonTitaniaUmbriel

Uranus’ Moons

Uranus’ moon Miranda has a strange fractured appearance, as if it was shattered then put back together.

The high cliffs and winding valleys of the moon may indicate that Miranda was larger in the past and shrank to its current size.

Miranda

Picture of Titania taken by Voyager 2. Titania is 1600 kilometers in diameter.

Titania

An artists view, this montage of images of the Uranian system was prepared from an assemblage of images taken by the Voyager 2 spacecraft during its Uranus encounter in January 1986.