Two views of the
planet Uranus appear side-by-side for comparison. At the top, left corner of
the left image is a two-line label. The top line reads Uranus November 9, 2014.
The bottoms line reads HST WFC3/UVIS. At the top, left corner of the right
image is the label November 9, 2022. At the left, bottom corner of each image
is a small, horizontal, white line. In both panels, over this line is the value
25,400 miles. Below the line is the value 40,800 kilometers. At the top, right
corner of the right image are three, colored labels representing the color
filters used to make these pictures. Located on three separate lines, these are
F467M in blue, F547M in green, and F485M in red. On the bottom, right corner of
the right image are compass arrows showing north toward the top and east toward
the left. Credits: NASA
Here on Earth, we undergo a
changing of seasons every three months. But what about the rest of the Solar
System? What does a sunny day on Mars look like? How long would a winter on
Neptune be? Let’s take a tour of some other planets and ask ourselves what
seasons might look like there.
Martian Autumn
Although Mars and Earth have nearly
identical axial tilts, a year on Mars lasts 687 Earth days (nearly 2 Earth
years) due to its average distance of 142 million miles from the Sun, making it
late autumn on the red planet. This distance and a thin atmosphere make it less
than perfect sweater weather. A recent weather report from Gale Crater boasted
a high of -18 degrees Fahrenheit for the
week of May 20, 2025.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Seven Years of Summer
Saturn has a 27-degree tilt, very
similar to the 25-degree tilt of Mars and the 23-degree tilt of Earth. But that
is where the similarities end. With a 29-year orbit, a single season on the
ringed planet lasts seven years. While we can’t experience a Saturnian season, we can observe a ring plane crossing here on Earth instead. The most recent plane crossing took place in
March 2025, allowing us to see Saturn’s rings ‘disappear’ from view.
A Lifetime of
Spring
NASA Hubble Space Telescope observations in August
2002 show that Neptune's brightness has increased significantly since 1996. The
rise is due to an increase in the amount of clouds observed in the planet's
southern hemisphere. These increases may be due to seasonal changes caused by a
variation in solar heating. Because Neptune's rotation axis is inclined 29
degrees to its orbital plane, it is subject to seasonal solar heating during
its 164.8-year orbit of the Sun. This seasonal variation is 900 times smaller
than experienced by Earth because Neptune is much farther from the Sun. The
rate of seasonal change also is much slower because Neptune takes 165 years to
orbit the Sun. So, springtime in the southern hemisphere will last for several
decades! Remarkably, this is evidence that Neptune is responding to the weak
radiation from the Sun. These images were taken in visible and near-infrared
light by Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2.
Credit: NASA, L. Sromovsky, and P. Fry (University of
Wisconsin-Madison)
Even further away from the Sun, each season on Neptune lasts over 40 years.
Although changes are slower and less dramatic than on Earth, scientists have
observed seasonal activity in Neptune’s atmosphere. These images were taken between 1996 and 2002 with the Hubble Space Telescope,
with brightness in the southern hemisphere indicating seasonal change.
As we welcome summer here on Earth, you can build a Suntrack model that helps demonstrate the path the Sun takes through the sky during the seasons. You can find even more fun activities and resources like this model on NASA's Wavelength and Energy activity.
by Kat
Troche of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Source: June’s Night Sky Notes: Seasons of the Solar System - NASA Science
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