- Where is It?
-
Uranus
is the seventh planet in our solar
system, located in between Saturn and Neptune. Uranus is very
far away from the Sun. Its average distance from the Sun is
about one and three-quarters billion miles,
or about twenty times the distance from the Sun to Earth. The
path, or orbit, Uranus follows around the Sun is an ellipse,
or stretched out circle, which means that Uranus' distance
from the Sun varies from about 1.7 billion (1,700,000,000)
miles at its closest to about 1.87 billion (1,870,000,00)
miles at its furthest away.
Since Uranus is so far away from the Sun, it takes it a very
long to to go around the Sun once. A year on Uranus, the
amount of time it takes for this trip, is 84 Earth years. A
day on Uranus, which is the amount of time it takes for the
plant to spin around, or rotate, once is shorter than a day
here on Earth. The blue-green planet spins around once in a
little over seventeen hours.
One of the many odd facts about Uranus is that it is
"lying on its side" as it faces the Sun. Earth faces
the sun standing almost straight up, with the north and south
poles at the top and bottom as it looks at the Sun. For some
reason, Uranus has rolled over, so what we would think of as
the south pole is facing the Sun. Scientists don't know why
the planet does this, but it may be the result of a collision
with some other body in space. Also, the planet rotates, or
spins, from East to West which is the exact opposite of the
way that Earth spins.
- Can I See It?
-
Since it is so far away from Earth, and so much smaller than
the giant planets Jupiter and Saturn, it is fairly hard to
see. If you live in a place where the skies are dark and you
can see to the southern horizon, you might be able to pick out
Uranus with a pair of binoculars. The planet will appear as a
faint blue-green light. Even through a telescope, Uranus will
only be a small blue-green disc.
- How Big Is It?
-
Uranus is about four times the size of Earth, but it is still
much smaller than either Saturn or Jupiter. Uranus is a little
over 30 thousand miles in diameter, compared to Earth's
diameter of around 7,600 miles. Even though Uranus is much
larger than our Earth, it is dwarfed when compared to mighty
Jupiter, which is over 85 thousand miles in diameter.
- Does It Have Rings?
-
Yes, it does, as all the gas planets do, but the rings of
Uranus are a very faint imitation of the spectacular rings
that surround Saturn. The Voyager spacecraft showed us the
rings, which we cannot see at all from Earth. The only way
that Earthbound astronomers can even get a hint of the rings
is when they occasionally block the light of a star behind
them. Even the Hubble Space Telescope cannot get a very good
view of the rings, as the picture at right shows.
While the rings of Saturn are made up of fairly small pieces
of bright white ices, the rings of Uranus for the most part
are made of larger chunks of very dark, rocky material. The
darkness of the chunks that make up the rings help explain why
we cannot see them from Earth.
- How Many Moons Does It Have?
-
As plain as Uranus appears, it has an interesting collection
of at least fifteen moons. There are probably more, but we
don't have any way of finding out for sure until, and if, we
send another spacecraft to investigate.
The five moons in the picture at right are the largest, and
furthest away, of Uranus' family of moons. From top to bottom,
they are Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania and Oberon. In case
you are wondering where such unusual names came from, they are
named after characters in the stories of William Shakespeare
and Alexander Pope. We have known about these moons for many
years.
The remaining ten moons in the collection are much smaller
and a lot closer to the planet. They were discovered by the
Voyager 2 spacecraft as it sped past the planet in 1986. Some
of the smaller moons act as "shepherds", helping to
keep some order in some of the rings. The others may be comets
or asteroids that have been "captured" by the planet
as they attempted to fly by. This is another of many mysteries
about Uranus that scientists are trying to explain.
- How Did It Get Its Name?
-
Uranus was the first planet to be discovered by an astronomer.
It was discovered, accidentally, by British astronomer William
Herschel in 1781. This meant that someone had to come up with
a name for the new planet. Herschel named it "Georgium
Sidus", after the King of England at that time, George
III (the King that Americans rebelled against). This seemed
fair to Herschel, since the King was paying for his research.
Grownups being what they are, others called the planet
Herschel, in honor of the discoverer. Another astronomer
suggested the name Uranus, an ancient Greek god who was the
father of Saturn, so the new planet would have a name from
mythology like the rest of the planets at that time, and that
name was finally agreed on by everybody in the mid 1800's.
- What Is It Made Of?
-
Uranus is another member of the family of gas planets that
live in our solar system, but it is quite a bit different from
Jupiter and Saturn. First, it has methane gas mixed in with
the hydrogen and helium that make up most of the giant
planets. Methane is what gives Uranus its unusual color.
Second, Uranus appears to have a core, or center, of melted
rock, which changes into a dirty ocean made of of water,
ammonia and other elements the further from the center you go.
Finally, the dirty ocean changes into the blue-green cover of
clouds that we see in the pictures. Scientists believe that
the layer of the planet are not separate, like those of an
onion, but gradually blend with one another.
- What's It Like On The Surface?
-
Since Uranus is a gas planet, it doesn't have a solid surface
like we have here on Earth. The top layer of gas that we see
is far from quiet, though. By carefully studying the pictures
sent back by the Voyager spacecraft, scientists were able to
see that there are winds blowing at over four hundred miles an
hour!
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