Uranus, the seventh planet from the Sun, orbits in the outer solar system, about two billion miles (3.2 billion kilometers) from Earth. It is a huge world – four times the diameter of Earth, with 15 times the mass and 63 times the volume.
Unvisited by spacecraft for more than 35 years, Uranus resides in one of the least explored regions of our solar system. Although scientists have learned a few things about it from telescopic observations and theoretical work since the Voyager 2 flyby in 1986, the planet remains an enigma.
It is easy to divide the solar system into two large groups: an inner belt with four rocky planets and an outer belt with four giant planets. But nature, as usual, is more complicated. Uranus and Neptune, the eighth planet from the Sun, are very different from the others. Both are ice giants, composed mostly of compounds such as water, ice, ammonia and methane; they are places where the average temperature is minus 320 to minus 350 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 212 Celsius).
Through the recent discovery of exoplanets – worlds outside our solar system trillions of miles away – astronomers have learned that ice giants are common throughout the galaxy. They challenge our understanding of planetary formation and evolution. Uranus, which is close to us, is our cornerstone to learn about.
New mission
Many in the space community – like me – are urging NASA to send a robotic spacecraft to explore Uranus. In fact, a 2023 decennial survey of planetary scientists ranked such a trip as the highest priority for NASA’s new flagship mission.
This time, the spacecraft would not simply fly past Uranus on its way somewhere else, as Voyager 2 did. Instead, the probe would spend years orbiting and studying the planet, which 27 moons and their 13 rings.
You may wonder why a spacecraft goes to Uranus and not Neptune. It is an object of orbital architecture. Because of the positions of the two planets over the next two decades, a spacecraft from Earth will have an easier path to follow to reach Uranus than Neptune. Launched at the right time, the orbiter would reach Uranus in 12 years.
Here are some of the basic questions that Uranus’ orbit would help answer: What, exactly, is Uranus made of? Why is Uranus tilted on its side, with its poles pointing almost directly towards the Sun during the summer – unlike all the other planets in the solar system? What generates Uranus’s peculiar magnetic field, which is shaped differently than Earth and is not aligned with the direction the planet rotates? How does atmospheric circulation work on an ice giant? What do the answers to these questions tell us about how ice giants form?
Despite the progress scientists have made on these and other questions since the Voyager 2 flight, there is no substitute for direct, close-up and repeated observations from an orbiting spacecraft.
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