KEY POINTS
- Jupiter, Saturn, and
Neptune each emit more energy than they receive from the Sun, meaning they
have comparatively warm interiors.
- NASA’s Uranus flyby with
Voyager 2 in 1986 found the planet colder than expected, which challenged
ideas of how planets formed and evolved.
- However, with advanced
computer modeling and a new look at old data, scientists think the planet
may actually be warmer than previously expected.
For millennia, astronomers thought
Uranus was no more than a distant star. It wasn’t until the late 18th century
that Uranus was universally accepted as a planet. To this day, the ringed, blue
world subverts scientists’ expectations, but new NASA research helps puzzle out
some of the world’s mystique.
This zoomed-in image of Uranus, captured by the
Near-Infrared Camera on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope on Feb. 6, 2023,
reveals stunning views of Uranus’ rings.
Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI
Uranus is unlike any other planet in our solar system. It spins on its
side, which means each pole directly faces the Sun for a continuous 42-year
“summer.” Uranus also rotates in the opposite direction of all planets except
Venus. Data from NASA’s Voyager 2 Uranus flyby in 1986 also suggested the
planet is unusually cold inside, challenging scientists to reconsider
fundamental theories of how planets formed and evolved throughout our solar
system.
“Since Voyager 2’s flyby, everybody
has said Uranus has no internal heat,” said Amy Simon, a planetary scientist at
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “But it’s been
really hard to explain why that is, especially when compared with the other
giant planets.”
These Uranus projections came from
only one up-close measurement of the planet’s emitted heat made by Voyager 2:
“Everything hinges on that one data point,” said Simon. “That is part of the
problem.”
Now, using an advanced computer
modeling technique and revisiting decades of data, Simon and a team of
scientists have found that Uranus does in fact generate some heat, as
they reported on May 16 in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Society journal.
A planet’s internal heat can be
calculated by comparing the amount of energy it receives from the Sun to the
amount it of energy it releases into space in the form of reflected light and
emitted heat. The solar system’s other giant planets — Saturn, Jupiter, and
Neptune — emit more heat than they receive, which means the extra heat is
coming from inside, much of it left over from the high-energy processes that
formed the planets 4.5 billion years ago. The amount of heat a planet exudes
could be an indication of its age: the less heat released relative to the heat
absorbed from the Sun, the older the planet is.
Uranus stood out from the other
planets because it appeared to give off as much heat as it received, implying
it had none of its own. This puzzled scientists. Some hypothesized that perhaps
the planet is much older than all the others and has cooled off completely.
Others proposed that a giant collision — the same one that may have knocked the
planet on its side — blasted out all of Uranus’ heat. But none of these
hypotheses satisfied scientists, motivating them to solve Uranus’ cold case.
“We thought, ‘Could it really be
that there is no internal heat at Uranus?’” said Patrick Irwin, the paper’s
lead author and professor of planetary physics at the University of Oxford in
England. “We did many calculations to see how much sunshine is reflected by
Uranus and we realized that it is actually more reflective than people had
estimated.”
The researchers set out to
determine Uranus’ full energy budget: how much energy it receives from the Sun
compared to how much it reflects as sunlight and how much it emits as heat. To
do this, they needed to estimate the total amount of light reflected from the
planet at all angles. “You need to see the light that’s scattered off to the
sides, not just coming straight back at you,” Simon said.
To get the most accurate estimate of Uranus' energy budget yet, Oxford researchers developed a computer model that brought together everything known about Uranus’ atmosphere from decades of observations from ground- and space-based telescopes, including NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and NASA’s Infrared Telescope Facility in Hawaii. The model included information about the planet’s hazes, clouds, and seasonal changes, all of which affect how sunlight is reflected and how heat escapes.
These side-by-side images of Uranus, taken eight years
apart by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, show seasonal changes in the planet’s
reflectivity. The left image shows the planet seven years after its northern
spring equinox when the Sun was shining just above its equator. The second
photo, taken six years before the planet’s summer solstice, portrays a bright
and large northern polar cap.
Credit: NASA, ESA, STScI, A. Simon (NASA-GSFC), M. H.
Wong (UC Berkeley), J. DePasquale (STScI)
The researchers found that Uranus releases about 15% more energy than it
receives from the Sun, a figure that is similar to another recent estimate from
a separate study funded in part by NASA that was published July 14 in Geophysical Research Letters. These studies suggest Uranus it has its own heat,
though still far less than its neighbor Neptune, which emits more than twice
the energy it receives.
“Now we have to understand what
that remnant amount of heat at Uranus means, as well as get better measurements
of it,” Simon said.
Unraveling Uranus’ past is useful
not only for mapping the timeline of when solar system planets formed and
migrated to their current orbits, but it also helps scientists better
understand many of the planets discovered outside the solar system, called exoplanets,
a majority of which are the same size as Uranus.
By Emma FriedmanNASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA, Oxford Discover Warmer Uranus Than Once Thought - NASA Science
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