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Uranus

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Template:Planet Infobox/Uranus

Uranus (IPA: /ˈjuɹənəs/, /jəˈɹeɪnəs/, or ˈuɹənəs) is the seventh planet from the Sun. It is a gas giant, the third largest by diameter and fourth largest by mass. It is named after Uranus, the Greek god of the sky and progenitor of the other gods. Its symbol is either ♅; (Unicode U+2645, mostly astrological) or Astronomical symbol for Uranus (mostly astronomical).

NASA's Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to have visited the planet and no other visits are currently planned. Launched in 1977, Voyager made its closest approach to Uranus on January 24 1986 before continuing on its journey to Neptune.

Discovery and naming

Uranus was the first planet to be discovered that was not known in ancient times; although it had been observed on many previous occasions, it was always mistakenly identified as a star. The earliest recorded sighting was in 1690 when John Flamsteed catalogued it as 34 Tauri. Flamsteed observed Uranus twice again, in 1712 and 1715. Bradley observed it in 1748, 1750 and 1753; Mayer in 1756. Le Monnier observed it four times in 1750, twice in 1768, six times in 1769, and one last time in 1771. He was a victim of his own disorderliness: one of his observations was found consigned on a paper bag used to store hair powder.

Sir William Herschel formally discovered the planet on March 13, 1781, but reported it on April 26, 1781, as a "comet": Account of a Comet, By Mr. Herschel, F. R. S.; Communicated by Dr. Watson, Jun. of Bath, F. R. S., Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Volume 71, pp. 492-501.

Herschel originally named it Georgium Sidus (George's Star) in honour of King George III of Great Britain. When it was pointed out that sidus means star and not planet, he rebaptised it the Georgian Planet. In any case, this name was not acceptable outside of Britain. Lalande proposed in 1784 to name it Herschel, at the same time that he created the planet's symbol ("a globe surmounted by your initial"); his proposal was readily adopted by French astronomers. Prosperin, of Uppsala, proposed the names Astraea, Cybele, and Neptune (now borne by two asteroids and a planet). Lexell, of St. Petersburg, compromised with George III's Neptune and Great-Britain's Neptune. Bernoulli, from Berlin, suggested Hypercronius and Transaturnis. Lichtenberg, from Göttingen, chimed in with Austräa, a goddess mentioned by Ovid (but who is traditionally associated with Virgo). The name Minerva was also proposed.[1] Finally, Bode, as editor of the Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch, opted for Uranus, after Latinized version of the Greek god of the sky, Ouranos; Maximilian Hell followed suit by using it in the first ephemeris, published in Vienna. Examination of earliest issues of Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society from 1827 shows that the name Uranus was already the most common name used even by British astronomers by then, and probably earlier. The name Georgium Sidus or "the Georgian" were still used infrequently (by the British alone) thereafter. The final holdout was HM Nautical Almanac Office, which did not switch to Uranus until 1850.

In the Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese languages, the planet's name is literally translated as the sky king star (天王星).[2][3]

Physical characteristics

Composition

Uranus is composed primarily of rock and various ices, with about 85% hydrogen, 15% helium and traces of methane (in contrast to Jupiter and Saturn which are almost entirely hydrogen). Uranus (like Neptune) is very much similar to the cores of Jupiter and Saturn without the massive liquid metallic hydrogen envelope. 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. Uranus' cyan color is due to the absorption of red light by atmospheric methane. Surface temperature on Uranus's cloud cover is approximately 55 K (−218 °C or −360 °F).

Axial tilt

One of the most distinctive features of Uranus is its axial tilt of ninety-eight degrees. Consequently, for part of its orbit one pole faces the Sun continually while the other pole faces away. At the other side of Uranus' orbit the orientation of the poles towards the Sun is reversed. Between these two extremes of its orbit the Sun rises and sets around the equator normally.

At the time of Voyager 2's passage in 1986, Uranus' south pole was pointed almost directly at the Sun. Note that the labelling of this pole as "south" is actually in some dispute. Uranus can either be described as having an axial tilt of slightly more than 90°, or it can be described as having an axial tilt of slightly less than 90° and rotating in a retrograde direction; these two descriptions are exactly equivalent as physical descriptions of the planet but result in different definitions of which pole is the North Pole and which is the South Pole.

One result of this odd orientation is that the polar regions of Uranus receive a greater energy input from the Sun than its equatorial regions. Uranus is nevertheless hotter at its equator than at its poles, although the underlying mechanism which causes this is unknown. The reason for Uranus' extreme axial tilt is also not known. It is speculated that perhaps during the formation of the planet it collided with an enormous protoplanet, resulting in the skewed orientation.

It appears that Uranus' extreme axial tilt also results in extreme seasonal variations in its weather. During the Voyager 2 flyby, Uranus' banded cloud patterns were extremely bland and faint. Recent Hubble Space Telescope observations, however, show a more strongly banded appearance now that the Sun is approaching Uranus' equator. By 2007 the Sun will be directly over Uranus's equator.

Magnetic field

Uranus' magnetic field is odd for it is not centered on the center of the planet and is tilted almost 60° from the axis of rotation. It is probably generated by motion at relatively shallow depths within Uranus. Neptune has a similarly displaced magnetic field, which suggests the magnetic field is not necessarily a consequence of Uranus' axial tilt. The magnetotail is twisted by the planet's rotation into a long corkscrew shape behind the planet. The magnetic field's source is unknown; the electrically conductive, super-pressurized ocean of water and ammonia once thought to lie between the core and the atmosphere now appears to be nonexistent.

Planetary rings

Uranus has a faint planetary ring system, composed of dark particulate matter up to ten meters in diameter. This ring system was discovered in March 1977 by James L. Elliot, Edward W. Dunham, and Douglas J. Mink using the Kuiper Airborne Observatory. The discovery was serendipitous; they planned to use the occultation of a star by Uranus to study the planet's atmosphere, but when they analyzed their observations they found that the star had disappeared briefly from view five times both before and after it disappeared behind the planet. They concluded that there must be a ring system around the planet; it was directly detected when the Voyager 2 space probe passed Uranus in 1986. As of 2005, 13 rings had been identified. In December 2005, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope photographed a pair of previously unknown rings. The largest is twice the diameter of the planet's previously known rings. The new rings are so far from the planet that they are being called Uranus's "second ring system". Hubble also spotted two small satellites. One shares its orbit with one of the newly discovered rings. Most surprisingly, the orbits of Uranus's family of inner moons have changed significantly in the last decade, the new data reveals.

In April of 2006, information about two more rings was published, one of them appearing blue, the other red. The rest of the planet's rings appear grey. The blue ring is thought to get its color from being swept by a moon, which may draw away all large debris, leaving only fine dust which refracts light in much the same way the Earth's atmosphere seems to when you're looking up at it, making it appear blue.

Natural satellites

Uranus has 27 known moons. The names for these moons are chosen from characters from the works of Shakespeare and Alexander Pope. The five main satellites are Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania and Oberon (For a timeline of discovery dates, see Timeline of natural satellites).

The main Uranian moons
(compared to Earth's Moon)
Name

(Pronunciation key)

Diameter
(km)
Mass
(kg)
Orbital radius
(km)
Orbital period
(d)
Miranda mə-ran'-də
məˈrændə
470
(14%)
0.7×1020
(0.1%)
129,000
(35%)
1.4
(5%)
Ariel arr'-ee-əl
ˈariəl
1160
(33%)
14×1020
(1.8%)
191,000
(50%)
2.5
(10%)
Umbriel um'-bree-əl
ˈʌmbriəl
1170
(34%)
12×1020
(1.6%)
266,000
(70%)
4.1
(15%)
Titania tə-taan'-yə
təˈtɑnjə
1580
(45%)
35×1020
(4.8%)
436,000
(115%)
8.7
(30%)
Oberon oe'-bər-on
ˈɔʊbərɑn
1520
(44%)
30×1020
(4.1%)
584,000
(150%)
13.5
(50%)

Visibility

Size comparison of Earth and Uranus

The brightness of Uranus is between magnitude +5.5 and +6.0, so it can be seen with the naked eye as a faint star under dark sky conditions. It can be easily found with binoculars. From Earth, it has a diameter of four arc-seconds. Even in large telescopes no details can be seen on its disc. However, infrared studies of its atmosphere using adaptive optics have yielded interesting data in the years since the Voyager flyby.[4]

For more details, see Aspects of Uranus


Uranus in fiction and pop culture

  • Mr. Vivenair (a pseudonym) published A Journey Lately Performed Through the Air in an Aerostatic Globe, Commonly Called an Air Balloon, From This Terraquaeous Globe to the Newly Discovered Planet, Georgium Sidus in 1784.
  • In the Buck Rogers series (1928–), Uranus is portrayed as having biodomes and robots.
  • R. R. Winterbotham's "Clouds over Uranus" was published by Astounding in March of 1937
  • In the 1962 film Journey to the Seventh Planet, astronauts on (sic) Uranus encounter a strange intelligence.[5]
  • In the Doctor Who (1963–) serial The Daleks' Master Plan, Uranus is described as being the only location in the universe where the mineral Taranium can be acquired.
  • In H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos (1928–), Uranus is known as L'gy'hx and is inhabited by cubical metallic many-legged creatures who worship Lrogg. They entered in religious conflict with the Shan. (Ramsey Campbell's The Insects from Shaggai, 1964)
  • In Space Patrol (1962) episode: The Dark Planet - Professor Heggerty and his daughter Cassiopeia are baffled by a plant sample from Uranus with a mind of its own! Following the disappearance of a 20 strong survey team on Uranus, Colonel Raeburn despatch the Space Patrol crew to locate larger versions of the plant, where they discover the adult specimens of the plant are far from friendly.
  • In the anime Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon (1992), Sailor Uranus is the seventh guardian soldier to appear in the series, and represents the planet. Her attacks are associated with the force of nature (e.g. World Shaking, which is basically an earthquake). Later in the series, her attacks become more of galactic-like (e.g. Space Turbulence). Her talisman is Space Sword, and her image colours are beige and sometimes, gold.
  • In Wayne W. Dyer's Gifts from Eykis (2002), Eykis is a female from Uranus who imparts wisdom and spirituality to Earth.
  • In the role-playing game Transhuman Space, China has begun preliminary harvesting of helium-3 from Uranus' atmosphere to compete against American helium-3 harvesting on Saturn.
  • In Blue Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson, Anne Clayborne and Zo Boone visit Uranus' moon Miranda, which is being preserved as a primal wilderness; the other sizeable moons of Uranus are being ambitiously colonised at the time with the help of fusion lanterns placed in Uranus' upper atmosphere to provide more light.
  • The Captain Underpants series make constant references to Uranus.

The most common pronunciation for Uranus is a homophone for the English phrase "your anus" and therefore has become the subject of many jokes in pop culture

  • In the animated series Futurama (1999–2003), in 2620 the name of Uranus was changed to get rid of "That Stupid Joke" once and for all - but the new name is "Urectum"
  • In the Harry Potter series, Ron Weasley mispronounces the name "Uranus", leading to several giggles and scorn from his divination teacher.
  • In one episode of Fairly Odd Parents, Timmy's dad becomes an astronaut on a mission to Uranus. The joke is used by many in the episode.
  • In E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial Eliot's classmates taunt him about his extra-terrestrial sighting, asking "Where does he come from, Uranus?"

See also

References

  1. ^ "Voyager at Uranus". NASA JPL. 7 (85): 400–268. 1986.
  2. ^ "Sailormoon Terms and Information" (HTML). The Sailor Senshi Page. Retrieved 2006-03-05.
  3. ^ "Asian Astronomy 101". Hamilton Amateur Astronomers. 4 (11). 1997. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  4. ^ "New Images Reveal Clouds on Planet Uranus" (HTML). Space.com. 2004. Retrieved 2006-03-05.
  5. ^ "Journey to the Seventh Planet" (HTML). Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2006-03-05.

Special characters

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