• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

The Dark Sides Of Uranus’s Moons Are The Wrong Way Round

June 17, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Uranus is a very weird planet, and it turns out that there is a newly discovered oddity to add to its already extensive list. Astronomers used Hubble to study the interactions between the planet’s weird magnetic field and its moons, trying to demonstrate that a well-founded hypothesis was true. They found out the very opposite.

Uranus orbits on its side, so that its poles take turns facing the Sun. Also, its magnetic field doesn’t go through the center of Uranus, creating a peculiar magnetosphere around the planet and its moons. Even that considered, astronomers expected to see a clear effect on the four main moons: Ariel, Umbriel, Titania, and Oberon. These are all tidally locked, meaning they always show the same face to the planet, just like our Moon.

The magnetic field of Uranus is also tilted at 59 degrees, so it constantly sweeps past the moons faster than they can orbit the planet. The expectation from models is that it would cause a rain of charged particles onto the trailing side of those moons. This process should have darkened that face of the moons, and in comparison, the leading side should look brighter.

More electrons slamming on one side would make that side darker. The model suggests that the trailing side gets more electrons, so it should be darker. It makes perfect sense. Unfortunately, Uranus stubbornly refuses to make sense. It is the leading side of two of these moons that has somehow darkened, as if they are the wrong way around.

“Uranus is weird, so it’s always been uncertain how much the magnetic field actually interacts with its satellites,” principal investigator Richard Cartwright of the Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory said in a statement. “For starters, it is tilted by 98 degrees relative to the ecliptic.” 

The cause of it all is not likely to be the magnetosphere. Astronomers suspect it might be dust, a bit like having bugs on a windshield. Titania and Oberon have a darker and redder leading hemisphere compared to their trailing hemisphere, something not seen in inner moons Ariel and Umbriel, which have similar hemispheres. Small irregular moons around Uranus slowly throw dust into orbit following micrometeorite impacts. The dust is swept away by the larger outer moons.

“We see the same thing happening in the Saturn system and probably the Jupiter system as well,” added co-investigator Bryan Holler of the Space Telescope Science Institute. “This is some of the first evidence we’re seeing of a similar material exchange among the Uranian satellites.”

“So that supports a different explanation,” said Cartwright. “That’s dust collection. I didn’t even expect to get into that hypothesis, but you know, data always surprise you.”

What about the magnetic field? It is possible that the magnetosphere is less active than previously imagined, or it is a lot more complicated. Knowing Uranus, it is probably the latter. The team will continue observations and use data from JWST to try to better understand what’s going on.

The results were presented at the 246th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Anchorage, Alaska, on June 10.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Bolivian president calls for global debt relief for poor countries
  2. Five Seasons Ventures pulls in €180M fund to tackle human health and climate via FoodTech
  3. Humanity’s Journey To A Metal-Rich Asteroid Launches Today. Here’s How To Watch
  4. Unexplained And Deadly Heat Wave Hotspots Are Showing Up Across The Planet

Source Link: The Dark Sides Of Uranus's Moons Are The Wrong Way Round

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Psychologists Offer A “New Path” To The Good Life
  • Mirror Writing: Why Do So Many Children Write Backwards?
  • An Enormous “Blob” In Utah Is Up To 80,000 Years Old And Among Earth’s Oldest Organisms
  • Over Half Of Tuvalu Nationals Apply For Ballot Offering Australian “Climate Visa”
  • Process “To Unlock The Deepest Secrets Of Antarctica’s Ice” Begins With 1.5-Million-Year-Old Sample
  • Our Galaxy Appears To Be Part Of A Structure So Large It Challenges Our Current Models Of Cosmology
  • “Eerie, Beautiful, And Interesting”: The Most Unbelievable Things We Have Seen On Mars
  • Asteroid 33 Polyhymnia May Contain Elements Not Yet Seen On Earth
  • The Transverse Thomson Effect Finally Observed After 174 Years
  • “Extraordinary Fossil” Of Giant Ichthyosaur Dates Back 183 Million Years, 8 Children Have Been Born With 3 Biological Parents Each, And Much More This Week
  • A Spinning Island Lake In Argentina Looms Out Of The Swamps Like An Eyeball
  • Mammals Have Evolved Into Ant Eaters 12 Times Since The Dinosaurs Went Extinct
  • Thieving Pulsar Spinning 592 Times A Second Reveals New Understanding Of Where Its X-Rays Come From
  • The Rise And Fall (And Lamentable Rise) Of The “Alpha Male” Myth
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: How Do Black Holes Shape The Universe?
  • North America’s Smallest Turtle Is The Cutest Thing You’ll Find In A Bog
  • “Unambiguous Signal” To Curb Emissions Now: Long-Lost Aerial Photos Reveal Evolution Of Antarctic Ice Shelf Collapse
  • 8 Children Have Been Born With 3 Biological Parents Each After Mitochondrial Transfer
  • First Known Observations Of Matter-Antimatter Asymmetry In Special Particle Decay
  • In 1973, NASA Sent Two Spiders Into Space To See If They Can Spin Webs – And They Learnt A Lot
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version