NASA’s Voyager 2 captured this image of Uranus while
flying by the ice giant in 1986. New research using data from the mission shows
a solar wind event took place during the flyby, leading to a mystery about the
planet’s magnetosphere that now may be solved.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
NASA’s Voyager 2 flyby of Uranus decades ago shaped scientists’
understanding of the planet but also introduced unexplained oddities. A recent
data dive has offered answers.
When NASA’s Voyager 2 spacecraft
flew by Uranus in 1986, it provided scientists’ first — and, so far, only —
close glimpse of this strange, sideways-rotating outer planet. Alongside the
discovery of new moons and rings, baffling new mysteries confronted scientists.
The energized particles around the planet defied their understanding of how
magnetic fields work to trap particle radiation, and Uranus earned a reputation
as an outlier in our solar system.
Now, new research analyzing the
data collected during that flyby 38 years ago has found that the source of that
particular mystery is a cosmic coincidence: It turns out that in the days just
before Voyager 2’s flyby, the planet had been affected by an unusual kind of space weather that squashed the planet’s magnetic field, dramatically compressing
Uranus’ magnetosphere.
“If Voyager 2 had arrived just a few days earlier, it would have observed a completely different magnetosphere at Uranus,” said Jamie Jasinski of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California and lead author of the new work published in Nature Astronomy. “The spacecraft saw Uranus in conditions that only occur about 4% of the time.”
The first panel of this artist’s concept depicts how
Uranus’s magnetosphere — its protective bubble — was behaving before the flyby
of NASA’s Voyager 2. The second panel shows an unusual kind of solar weather
was happening during the 1986 flyby, giving scientists a skewed view of the
magnetosphere.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Magnetospheres serve as protective bubbles around planets (including Earth)
with magnetic cores and magnetic fields, shielding them from jets of ionized
gas — or plasma — that stream out from the Sun in the solar wind. Learning more about how magnetospheres work is important for
understanding our own planet, as well as those in seldom-visited corners of our
solar system and beyond.
That’s why scientists were eager to
study Uranus’ magnetosphere, and what they saw in the Voyager 2 data in 1986
flummoxed them. Inside the planet’s magnetosphere were electron radiation belts
with an intensity second only to Jupiter’s notoriously brutal radiation belts. But there was apparently no source of energized
particles to feed those active belts; in fact, the rest of Uranus’
magnetosphere was almost devoid of plasma.
The missing plasma also puzzled
scientists because they knew that the five major Uranian
moons in the
magnetic bubble should have produced water ions, as icy moons around other
outer planets do. They concluded that the moons must be inert with no ongoing
activity.
Solving the
Mystery
So why was no plasma observed, and
what was happening to beef up the radiation belts? The new data analysis points
to the solar wind. When plasma from the Sun pounded and compressed the
magnetosphere, it likely drove plasma out of the system. The solar wind event
also would have briefly intensified the dynamics of the magnetosphere, which
would have fed the belts by injecting electrons into them.
The findings could be good news for
those five major moons of Uranus: Some of them might be geologically active
after all. With an explanation for the temporarily missing plasma, researchers
say it’s plausible that the moons actually may have been spewing ions into the
surrounding bubble all along.
Planetary scientists are focusing
on bolstering their knowledge about the mysterious Uranus system, which the
National Academies’ 2023 Planetary Science and Astrobiology Decadal Survey
prioritized as a target for a future NASA mission.
JPL’s Linda Spilker was among the
Voyager 2 mission scientists glued to the images and other data that flowed in during the Uranus
flyby in 1986. She remembers the anticipation and excitement of the event,
which changed how scientists thought about the Uranian system.
“The flyby was packed with
surprises, and we were searching for an explanation of its unusual behavior.
The magnetosphere Voyager 2 measured was only a snapshot in time,” said
Spilker, who has returned to the iconic mission to lead its science team as project
scientist. “This new work explains some of the apparent contradictions, and it
will change our view of Uranus once again.”
Voyager 2, now in interstellar space, is almost 13 billion miles (21 billion kilometers) from Earth.
By: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Source: Mining Old Data From NASA’s Voyager 2 Solves Several Uranus Mysteries - NASA


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