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- URANUS SCIENCE SUMMARY
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- NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft flew closely past distant
- Uranus, the seventh planet from the Sun, in January 1986.
- At its closest, the spacecraft came within 81,500
- kilometers (50,600 miles) of Uranus's cloudtops on Jan. 24, 1986.
- Voyager 2 radioed thousands of images and voluminous
- amounts of other scientific data on the planet, its moons, rings,
- atmosphere, interior and the magnetic environment surrounding
- Uranus.
- Since launch on Aug. 20, 1977, Voyager 2's itinerary
- has taken the spacecraft to Jupiter in July 1979, Saturn in
- August 1981, and then Uranus. Voyager 2's next encounter is with
- Neptune in August 1989. Both Voyager 2 and its twin, Voyager 1,
- will eventually leave our solar system and enter interstellar
- space.
- Voyager 2's images of the five largest moons around
- Uranus revealed complex surfaces indicative of varying geologic
- pasts. The cameras also detected 10 previously unseen moons.
- Several instruments studied the ring system, uncovering the fine
- detail of the previously known rings and two newly detected
- rings. Voyager data showed that the planet's rate of rotation is
- 17 hours, 14 minutes. The spacecraft also found a Uranian
- magnetic field that is both large and unusual. In addition, the
- temperature of the equatorial region, which receives less
- sunlight over a Uranian year, is nevertheless about the same as
- that at the poles.
- Before Voyager
- Nearly 3 billion kilometers (1.8 billion miles) from
- Earth, Uranus is the most distant object yet visited by a
- spacecraft. Uranus is so far away that scientists knew
- comparatively little about it before Voyager 2 undertook its
- historic first-ever encounter with the planet.
- Indeed, since its discovery by William Herschel in
- 1781, Uranus had remained largely a mystery throughout the
- ensuing two centuries. Five moons -- the first discovered in
- 1787, the last in 1948 -- were visible only as tiny points of
- light. A system of nine narrow rings went undetected until 1977.
- The planet's rate of rotation could be estimated only roughly and
- was believed to be anywhere from 16 to 24 hours. Before Voyager,
- there were indirect indications of a magnetic field at Uranus,
- although the evidence was not conclusive.
- Scientists were not sure what to expect from Uranus's
- strange orientation. The planet is tipped on its side, with its
- orbiting moons and rings forming a giant celestial bull's-eye.
- As a result, the northern and southern polar regions are
- alternatively exposed to sunlight or to the dark of space during
- the planet's 84-year orbit around the Sun.
- The Encounter
-
- Voyager 2's encounter of Uranus began Nov. 4, 1985 with
- an observatory phase. Activity built to a peak in late January
- 1986, with most of the critical observations occurring in a six-
- hour period in and around the time of closest approach. The
- spacecraft made its closest approach to Uranus at 9:59 a.m. PST
- on Jan. 24.
-
- To prepare for the flyby of this unusual planetary
- system, engineers extensively reprogrammed Voyager 2's onboard
- computers via radio control from the ground. They endowed the
- spacecraft with new capabilities that would enable it to return
- clear, close-up pictures despite the dim light and high velocity
- at which Voyager would be passing its targets. (Uranus receives
- about 1/400th of the sunlight that falls on Earth.)
- In addition, giant antenna receiving stations on Earth
- were linked electronically in order to capture and enhance
- Voyager's faint radio signal.
- Moons
- Voyager 2 obtained clear, high-resolution images of
- each of the five large moons of Uranus known before the
- encounter: Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania and Oberon. The two
- largest, Titania and Oberon, are about 1,600 kilometers (1,000
- miles) in diameter, roughly half the size of Earth's Moon. The
- smallest, Miranda, is only 500 kilometers (300 miles) across, or
- just one-seventh the lunar size.
- The 10 new moons discovered by Voyager bring the total
- number of known Uranian satellites to 15. The largest of the
- newly detected moons, named Puck, is about 150 kilometers (about
- 90 miles) in diameter, or larger than most asteroids.
- Preliminary analysis shows that the five large moons
- are ice-rock conglomerates like the satellites of Saturn. The
- large Uranian moons appear, in fact, to be about 50 percent water
- ice, 20 percent carbon- and nitrogen-based materials, and 30
- percent rock. Their surfaces, almost uniformly dark gray incolor, display varying degrees of geologic history. Very
- ancient, heavily cratered surfaces are apparent on some of the
- moons, while others show strong evidence of internal geologic
- activity.
- Titania, for example, is marked by huge fault systems
- and canyons that indicate some degree of geologic activity in its
- history. These features may be the result of tectonic movement
- in its crust. Ariel has the brightest and possibly the
- geologically youngest surface in the Uranian moon system. It is
- largely devoid of craters greater than about 50 kilometers (30
- miles) in diameter. This indicates that low-velocity material
- within the Uranian system itself peppered the surface, helping to
- obliterate larger, older craters. Ariel also appears to have
- undergone a period of even more intense activity leading to many
- fault valleys and what appear to be extensive flows of icy
- material. Where many of the larger valleys intersect, their
- surfaces are smooth; this could indicate that the valley floors
- have been covered with younger icy flows.
- Umbriel is ancient and dark, apparently having
- undergone little geologic activity. Large craters pockmark its
- surface. The darkness of Umbriel's surface may be due to a
- coating of dust and small debris somehow created near and
- confined to the vicinity of that moon's orbit.
- The outermost of the pre-Voyager moons, Oberon, also
- has an old, heavily cratered surface with little evidence of
- internal activity other than some unknown dark material
- apparently covering the floors of many craters.
-
- Miranda, innermost of the five large moons, is one of
- the strangest bodies yet observed in the solar system. Voyager
- images, which showed some areas of the moon at resolutions of a
- kilometer or less, consists of huge fault canyons as deep as 20
- kilometers (12 miles), terraced layers and a mixture of old and
- young surfaces. The younger regions may have been produced by
- incomplete differentiation of the moon, a process in which
- upwelling of lighter material surfaced in limited areas.
- Alternatively, Miranda may be a reaggregation of material from an
- earlier time when the moon was fractured into pieces by a violent
- impact.
- Given Miranda's small size and low temperature
- (-335 degrees Fahrenheit or -187 Celsius), the degree and
- diversity of the tectonic activity on this moon has surprised
- scientists. It is believed that an additional heat source such
- as tidal heating caused by the gravitational tug of Uranus must
- have been involved. In addition, some means must have mobilized
- the flow of icy material at low temperatures.
- The Rings
- All nine previously known rings of Uranus were
- photographed and measured, as were other new rings and ringlets
- in the Uranian system. These observations showed that Uranus's
- rings are distinctly different from those at Jupiter and Saturn.
- Radio measurements showed the outermost ring, the
- epsilon, to be composed mostly of ice boulders several feet
- across. However, a very tenuous distribution of fine dust also
- seems to be spread throughout the ring system.
- Incomplete rings and the varying opacity in several of
- the main rings leads scientists to believe that the ring system
- may be relatively young and did not form at the same time as
- Uranus. The particles that make up the rings may be remnants of
- a moon that was broken by a high-velocity impact or torn up by
- gravitational effects.
- To date, two new rings have been positively identified.
- The first, 1986 U1R, was detected between the outermost of the
- previously known rings -- epsilon and delta -- at a distance of
- 50,000 kilometers (31,000 miles) from Uranus's center. It is a
- narrow ring like the others. The second, designated 1986 U2R, is
- a broad region of material perhaps 3,000 kilometers (1,900 miles)
- across and just 39,000 kilometers (24,000 miles) from the
- planet's center.
- The number of known rings may eventually grow as a
- result of observations by the Voyager 2 photopolarimeter
- instrument. The sensor revealed what may be a large number of
- narrow rings -- or possibly incomplete rings or ring
- arcs -- as small as 50 meters (160 feet) in width.
- The individual ring particles were found to be of low
- reflectivity. At least one ring, the epsilon, was found to be
- gray in color. Important clues to Uranus's ring structure may
- come from the discovery that two small moons --Cordelia and
- Ophelia -- straddle the epsilon ring. This finding lends
- credence to theories that small moonlets may be responsible for
- confining or deflecting material into rings and keeping it from
- escaping into space. Eighteen such satellites were expected to
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- have been found, but only two were photographed.
- The sharp edge of the epsilon ring indicates that the
- ring is less than 150 meters (500 feet) thick and that particles
- near the outer edge are less than 30 meters (100 feet) in
- diameter.
- The epsilon ring is surprisingly deficient in particles
- smaller than about the size of a beachball. This may be due to
- atmospheric drag from the planet's extended hydrogen atmosphere,
- which probably siphons smaller particles and dust from the ring.
- The Planet
- As expected, the dominant constituents of the
- atmosphere are hydrogen and helium. But the amount of helium --
- about 15 percent -- was considerably less than the 40 percent
- that had been suggested by some Earth-based studies. Methane,
- acetylene and other hydrocarbons exist in much smaller
- quantities. Methane in the upper atmosphere absorbs red light,
- giving Uranus its blue-green color.
- Voyager images showed that the atmosphere is arranged
- into clouds running at constant latitudes, similar to the
- orientation to the more vivid latitudinal bands seen on Jupiter
- and Saturn. Winds at mid-latitudes on Uranus blow in the same
- direction as the planet rotates, just as on Earth, Jupiter and
- Saturn. These winds blow at velocities of 40 to 160 meters per
- second (90 to 360 miles per hour); on Earth, jet streams in the
- atmosphere blow at about 50 meters per second (110 mph). Radio
- science experiments found winds of about 100 meters per second
- blowing in the opposite direction at the equator.
- A high layer of haze -- photochemical smog -- was
- detected around the sunlit pole.
- The sunlit hemisphere also was found to radiate large
- amounts of ultraviolet light, a phenomenon that Voyager
- scientists have dubbed "dayglow."
- The average temperature on Uranus is about 60 Kelvin (-
- 350 degrees Fahrenheit). The minimum near the tropopause is 52 K
- (-366 F) at the 0.1-bar pressure level. (The tropopause is the
- boundary between the stratosphere and the troposphere, the lowest
- level of atmosphere, comparable to the region on Earth where life
- abounds. One bar is the average pressure at sea level on Earth.)
- Surprisingly, the illuminated and dark poles, and most
- of the planet, show nearly the same temperature below the
- tropopause. Voyager instruments did detect a somewhat colder
- band between 15 and 40 degrees latitude, where temperatures are
- about 2 to 3 K lower. The temperatures rise with increasing
- altitude, reaching 150 K (-190 F) in the rarified upper
- atmosphere. Below this level, temperatures increase steadily to
- thousands of degrees in the interior.
- Magnetosphere
- Radio emissions detected several days before closest
- approach provided the first conclusive indication that Uranus
- actually possesses an magnetosphere.
- Not only does a Uranian magnetic field exist; it is
- intense and skewed with its axis tilted at a 60-degree angle to
- rotational axis. At Earth, by comparison, the two axes are
- offset by about 12 degrees.
-
- The intensity of the magnetic field at Uranus's surface
- is roughly comparable to that of Earth's, though it varies much
- more from point to point because of its large offset from the
- center of Uranus. The magnetic field 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. The magnetic fields of Earth and
- other planets are believed to arise from electrical currents
- produced in their molten cores.
- As at Mercury, Earth, Jupiter and Saturn, there is a
- magnetic tail extending millions of miles behind Uranus. Voyager
- measured the magnetotail to at least 10 million kilometers (6.2
- million miles) behind the planet. The extreme tilt of the
- magnetic axis, combined with the tilt of the rotational axis,
- causes the field lines in this cylindrical magnetotail to be
- wound into a corkscrew shape.
- Voyager 2 found radiation belts at Uranus of an
- intensity similar to those at Saturn, although they differ in
- composition. The radiation belts at Uranus appear to be
- dominated by hydrogen ions, without any evidence of heavier ions
- (charged atoms) that might have been sputtered from the surfaces
- of the moons. Uranus's radiation belts are so intense that
- irradiation would quickly darken (within 100,000 years) any
- methane trapped in the icy surfaces of the inner moons and ring
- particles. This may have contributed to the darkened surfaces of
- the moons and ring particles.
- Voyager detected radio emissions from Uranus that,
- along with imaging data, helped narrow the planet's rate of
- rotation to about 17 hours, 14 minutes.
- The Next Encounter
- The Uranus encounter officially came to an end on Feb.
- 25, 1986. Eleven days earlier, project engineers took a major
- step toward the encounter at Neptune by commanding Voyager 2 to
- fire its thrusters for a course-correction maneuver lasting more
- than 2-1/2 hours.
- Voyager 2 will fly about 1,300 kilometers (800 miles)
- over the north pole of Neptune at 9 p.m. PDT on Aug. 24, 1989.
- Five hours later, Voyager 2 will encounter Neptune's moon, Triton
- -- the spacecraft's final destination before heading toward the
- boundary of our solar system.
- The Voyager project manager is Norman R. Haynes of JPL,
- and George P. Textor, also of JPL, is the deputy project manager.
- Dr. Edward C. Stone of the California Institute of Technology is
- the project scientist. Dr. Ellis D. Miner of JPL is the deputy
- project scientist. JPL manages the Voyager Project for NASA's
- Office of Space Science and Applications.
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- 12/21/88
- MBM