
Scientists uncover new details about Uranus' atmosphere, strange seasons
The study was published by a research group comprising scientists from the University of Arizona in the US as well as other institutions. It sheds light on the atmospheric composition and complex dynamics governing the mystery planet. The researchers were able to provide new information about Uranus after analysing images of the planet captured by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope over the last 20 years.
The Hubble images of Uranus were taken between 2002 and 2022. As per the study, Uranus' atmosphere is primarily composed of hydrogen and helium, along with small amounts of methane as well as minute quantities of water and ammonia.
Uranus is located between Saturn and Neptune. As the seventh planet from the Sun, Uranus remains one of the least understood planets in our solar system which is why the new research study may be significant. Scientists who authored the study also provided more information about seasonal changes on the planet. Unlike other planets, Uranus' axis of rotation is nearly parallel to its orbital plane.
It is likely that Uranus collided with an Earth-sized object, which might be the reason why it is said to be rotating in an 'overturned' position. As a result, it takes 84 years for the planet to complete one revolution around the Sun. This means that the surface of the planet gets sunshine for 42 years and the next 42-year-period is dark.
Over the course of the 20-year-long study, researchers were able to observe only a part of the seasonal change of Uranus' atmosphere.
The research builds on existing information about Uranus, like the fact that the planet is composed mainly of water and ammonia ice. It is approximately 51,000 kilometres in diameter, making Uranus four times bigger than the Earth with a mass that is 15 times greater than that of Earth's. Uranus also has 13 rings and 28 moons.
NASA's Voyager 2 is the only space probe mission that has explored the planet by conducting a flyby in January 1986. However, the group of scientists behind the new study said that they will continue to observe Uranus and gather more information on seasonal changes in its polar regions.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
4 hours ago
- The Hindu
New phase: On the NISAR mission
The GSLV-F16 mission lifted off from Sriharikota on July 30, placing the NASA ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) satellite into a sun synchronous orbit. The ascent capped a decade-long bilateral effort and opened a new phase in global earth observation cooperation. NISAR is a 2.8-tonne observatory that combines a NASA-built L-band radar with an ISRO-made S-band radar — also a first. They allow NISAR to detect surface changes measuring only a few centimetres, even through clouds and vegetation. NISAR will supply freely accessible data on ground deformation, glacier flow, biomass, land use changes, and sea ice dynamics. As its dawn-dusk orbit repeats every 12 days, its radars will be able to revisit the same point under nearly identical lighting conditions. This geometry, coupled with a duty cycle exceeding 50% in the L-band, has been designed to yield closely spaced time series observations that can quantify geological processes. Indeed, its various engineering firsts lead up to NISAR's unusually broad science agenda: map mangrove extent, urban subsidence, crop-soil interactions, and calving rates in polar ice shelves in a single orbital cycle. Its data could help support the Sendai Framework on reducing disaster risk and refine IPCC models. For ISRO, flying a flagship payload on the GSLV Mk II rocket is notable for a vehicle once dubbed 'naughty boy' for its early-career setbacks. The ISRO-NASA partnership would also have eased technology transfer between the two countries. Developing the S-band radar would have demanded tighter tolerances in radiofrequency electronics, thermal stability, and data throughput than previous Indian satellites. From a diplomatic standpoint, the launch confirms that India can be trusted with high-value hardware and demanding integration schedules, although it is still learning to shape joint missions on equal terms. The 12-metre reflector, the Ka band downlink, and much of the flight software stack were imported, and the key design reviews were led by NASA. Achieving parity will require larger domestic investments in advanced materials, deep-space communications, and systems engineering plus earlier Indian involvement in framing the scientific agenda of future multilateral missions. NISAR's data downlink rate also presents a challenge. ISRO must expand its Ka-band ground network, automate cloud-based processing, and release analysis-ready products within hours if state agencies are to make timely use of the data. Sustaining the time-wise data will also depend on authorising follow-on SAR spacecraft before 2030 and finalising data-sharing rules that encourage private analytics while protecting sensitive scenes. Addressing these gaps will determine how fully NISAR's potential is realised in India.


Hindustan Times
4 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
SpaceX postpones Crew-11 launch to ISS over stormy clouds
An international crew of four astronauts had their planned launch to the International Space Station from Florida on Thursday postponed over bad weather, delaying a mission that had been watched by a rare gathering of senior Russian space officials in town for a meeting with NASA's acting chief. This is NASA's 11th crew rotation and 12th human spaceflight mission to the ISS supported by the Dragon spacecraft since 2020, as part of the agency Commercial Crew Program. (Getty Images via AFP) The astronaut crew - two NASA astronauts, a Russian cosmonaut and a Japanese astronaut - boarded SpaceX's Dragon capsule sitting atop its Falcon 9 rocket at NASA's Kennedy Space Center and were due to lift off at 12:09 p.m. EDT (1609 GMT). But roughly a minute before launch, SpaceX mission controllers called a hold on the countdown because of stormy clouds that had been approaching the launchpad. The start of the astronauts' mission of at least six months on the ISS will move to Friday, NASA officials said. The head of Russia's space agency Roscosmos, Dmitry Bakanov, is in Cape Canaveral, Florida, for the mission and he plans to meet acting NASA administrator Sean Duffy, who took on the space chief role this month and is also the head of the US Department of Transportation. That will mark the first in-person meeting between US and Russian space agency chiefs since 2018, and a significant moment for the new NASA administrator who has emphasized he is serving only in an acting capacity. The attempted mission, called Crew-11, includes NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Michael Fincke, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Platonov, and Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui. They will replace the Crew-10 crew on the ISS, which departs on August 6. While US-Russian tensions over the war in Ukraine limited contact between the two space agencies, they have continued to share astronaut flights and cooperate on the ISS, a 25-year-old totem of scientific diplomacy crucial to maintaining the two space powers' storied human spaceflight capabilities. Bakanov and Duffy are expected to discuss extending the two countries' astronaut seat exchange agreement - in which US astronauts fly on Russian Soyuz capsules in exchange for Russian astronauts flying on US capsules - and the planned disposal of the ISS in 2030, according to Russian news agency TASS. While normal long-duration ISS missions are six months, the Crew-11 mission may be the first of many to last eight months, part of a new effort to align US mission schedules with Russia's. The mission will be the first spaceflight for Cardman, who was selected as a NASA astronaut in 2017, and Platonov, an engineer trained in aircraft operations and air traffic management who was selected to be a cosmonaut in 2018. "We know that he's in good hands," Sergei Krikalev, Roscosmos human spaceflight chief and a veteran cosmonaut, said of Platonov during a press conference on Wednesday.


News18
6 hours ago
- News18
Texas To Kansas Lightning Bolt Confirmed As World's Longest Ever At 829 Kilometres
The world's longest lightning bolt, stretching 829 km across the Great Plains, was confirmed by the WMO. A massive lightning strike that lit up the skies from Texas to Kansas has been confirmed as the world's longest lightning bolt ever recorded, stretching an astonishing 829 kilometres across the Great Plains. The strike occurred in October 2017 but was only recently confirmed, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said on Thursday. The bolt, classified as a 'megaflash," beat the previous record of 768 kilometres by a significant 61-kilometre margin. The previous record-holder flashed across Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi in April 2020. Unlike regular lightning, megaflashes stretch horizontally across clouds, often over hundreds of kilometres. Scientists say they are still learning about how these rare phenomena occur. 'We're just now figuring out the mechanics of how and why it occurs," said Randy Cerveny of Arizona State University, who also works with the WMO. 'It is likely that even greater extremes still exist, and that we will be able to observe them as additional high-quality lightning measurements accumulate over time." The discovery was made using satellite data from NOAA's GOES East weather satellite, which orbits over 35,000 kilometres above the Earth's surface. This high-altitude vantage point allows researchers to capture massive lightning events that ground-based detection systems often miss. Typically, most lightning bolts are less than 16 kilometres long and strike vertically. But when conditions allow, some stretch horizontally for hundreds of kilometres inside thundercloud systems and that's when megaflashes are born. Scientists classify any lightning bolt longer than 100 kilometres as a megaflash. The WMO said the new record highlights not only the raw power of nature, but also advances in lightning tracking technology that allow researchers to map and confirm such rare events. Lightning is caused by the build-up and discharge of electrical energy in storm clouds. As particles within the cloud collide, they create a separation of charges where positive charges rise to the top and negative sink to the bottom. When the imbalance becomes too great, electricity surges through the air in a sudden flash. This raw, powerful force of nature has fascinated humans for centuries, symbolising both fear and awe. Beyond its visual drama, lightning helps maintain Earth's electrical balance and contributes to nitrogen fixation in the soil, which is essential for plant life and a reminder of its hidden ecological role. view comments Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.