• 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

Why Planetary Scientists Think It’s Time For NASA To Probe Uranus

February 20, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

The time to launch a mission to Uranus is 2032, when spacecraft could get a boost from Jupiter on the way. If we’re going to do that we need to start planning – and seeking funds – now. In a new Perspective article, planetary scientist Dr Kathleen Mandt of the Southwest Research Institute makes the case we should do just that, but will all the sniggering get in the way?

The rocky planets of the inner Solar System have been visited by many missions, in Mars’ case from numerous nations. Jupiter has attracted the attention of nine and Saturn three, but Uranus and Neptune just one quick visit each, the same as non-planet Pluto. Even several asteroids have had more love.

Advertisement

Being so far away, it takes a lot of energy to get a spacecraft out to the ice giants in a reasonable amount of time, but that can be reduced dramatically by getting a gravity assist on the way. Even with 1970s technology, we managed to send Voyager 2 to both Uranus and Neptune by using a once-in-175-years alignment of the giant planets.

After that, things got harder, but the chance is coming around anew, with Jupiter and Uranus to align again, even if Saturn and Neptune won’t be so conveniently placed.

There are plenty of reasons to study Uranus. The similarities in size and chemistry between Uranus and Neptune suggest it could be a representative of a common class of planets. As Mandt notes, its strange tilt – 98 degrees to its orbital plane – obscures investigation from Earth. The favored explanation for this tilt is a collision with a large object, but we probably won’t know until we can study the planet in depth, rather than the quick squizz-and-go that Voyager II gave it.

Visiting Uranus could also contribute to solving one of the great outstanding questions of the Solar System: where did the giant planets form and what path did they take to end up at their current locations? We’ll probably need an atmospheric probe to sample Uranus’s noble gas abundances and nitrogen ratios to resolve that.

Advertisement

In addition to the planet itself, a future mission will find itself with plenty else worth studying. After Saturn, Uranus has the best set of rings in the Solar System, which are puzzlingly dark in color. Although it has no large moons, it does have 27 known medium-sized and small satellites. As Enceladus has shown, even a modest-sized moon can be fascinating if in the right location, and four of those orbiting Uranus are larger than that. Voyager II spotted signs of geologically-induced resurfacing on the five largest moons’ southern hemispheres.

None of those things are as strange as the Uranian magnetic field, which we don’t understand at all.

Mandt argues she is not a voice crying in the wilderness. The 2022 planetary science decadal survey (known as Origins, Worlds and Life) identified the “dearth of knowledge on the ice giants” as the highest priority to address in our investigations of the Solar System’s other planets.

Mandt also argues for more long-term work to begin towards a follow-up mission to Neptune, presumably to be launched to meet its own Jupiter window in 2041. The two missions could save money by using copies of the same equipment. 

Advertisement

Mandt uses the current name of Uranus Orbiter and Probe (UOP), which seems a much better approach than asking the Internet, as promoters of the mission unwisely did last year.

Maybe it would have been best for science, if not for comedians, if William Herschel had stuck with his original plan to call the planet he had discovered George, instead.

Mandt’s Perspective can be read in Science.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Senate panel may subpoena U.S. Defense Secretary Austin to testify on Afghanistan -Menendez
  2. TikTok starts flirting with NFTs
  3. Webcam Footage Of Storm Surge Shows The Devastating Impact Of Hurricane Ian
  4. Why Are Some Rockets Orange?

Source Link: Why Planetary Scientists Think It's Time For NASA To Probe Uranus

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • We Now Know When Denisovans, Neanderthals, And Modern Humans Inhabited Denisova Cave
  • Tailless Alligator Shocks Passersby On Highway In Southern Louisiana
  • What Is Trump’s “Golden Dome” Missile System And How Would It Actually Work?
  • Geophagia – Why Some People Eat Soil, And Whether You Should Try It Too (Spoiler: No)
  • Rare Moonlit Night On Mars Captured By Perseverance
  • This Strange, Supergiant Amphipod Inhabits Up To 59 Percent Of The World’s Seabed
  • The Pineal Gland Is Mysterious, But It’s Probably Not A Psychic “Third Eye”
  • New Contact Lenses Give You Infrared Vision Even With Your Eyes Shut
  • Only 2 Species Of This “Living Fossil” Exist – And 1 Was Just Photographed In The Wild For The First Time
  • New Sun Images At 8K Resolution Show Astounding, Never-Before-Seen Details
  • Why Do Ostriches Have Four Kneecaps If They Only Have Two Legs?
  • Toad In The Hole: The Myth And Mystery Of The Living Frogs Entombed In Rocks
  • Newest Member Of The Solar System Just Announced – And It’s In An Extreme Orbit
  • Meet Walckenaer’s Studded Triangular Spider And The Rest Of Its Triangular Family
  • World’s Largest Cliff-Top Boulder Was Rolled From 30-Meter-High Cliff By Ancient Tsunami
  • Flowers Have Been Blooming On Earth For 2 Million Years Longer Than We Thought
  • New Species Of Flapjack Octopus, A Shape-Shifting Cephalopod Of The Deep, Found In Australia
  • Galaxy Blasts Its Companion With Radiation In Never-Before-Seen “Cosmic Joust”
  • Electroacupuncture Is Acupuncture’s Livelier Cousin – But Does It Work?
  • Myth, Mess, and Mitochondria: How The Biggest Bird To Ever Exist Evolved And Died In Madagascar
  • 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