Beautiful and mysterious, peaceful and serene, the moon is the brightest object in the night sky. Jupiter and Saturn have more than sixty moons each. Neptune has thirteen moons. Even Mars has two moons. But the Earth, our planet, only has one moon, our nearest neighbor in space. Even though the moon is close to us when compared to other planets, it is still very, very far away. The moon is about 239 thousand miles or 384 thousand kilometers away. You would have to travel all the way around the Earth nine and a half times to go the same distance as the space between the Earth and the Moon. The moon is much smaller than the Earth. Ifthe Earth was hollow, about fifty moons could fit inside. Because it is so much smaller than the Earth, the moon's gravity is much weaker. This means that if you were to visit the moon, you would weigh much less than you do on earth, only about 1/6th of your current weight. That means that if a giraffe was on...
Uranus, the seventh planet from the sun, is the third-largest planet in the solar system, after Jupiter and Saturn, with a diameter about 4 times the Earth's. Like the two larger planets, Uranus is made largely of hydrogen and helium, but it also has many more icy compounds made of water, ammonia, and methane, as well as other materials. Because of this, Uranus is sometimes referred to as an "ice giant."
Uranus has the coldest atmosphere of any planet in the solar system, even though it is not the farthest planet from the sun, with temperatures of about -371 degrees F or -224 Celsius. Unlike Neptune, Uranus does not generate much internal heat. As a result, the weather on Uranus is mostly calm when compared to the feverish activity of the other gas giants.
In fact, at one time Uranus was called 'the most boring planet in the solar system!'. The exception is the weather produced during seasonal changes. Uranus is more than 1.7 billion miles or about 3 billion kilometers from the sun, and traces such a huge path around it that it takes 84 Earth years for Uranus to travel once around the sun. That means that each season lasts for 21 years! In addition, Uranus is tilted much, much more than the earth is.
Uranus is the only planet in the solar system to be tilted so far that it is rotating nearly side ways in its orbit! It is also one of only two planets in the solar system - Venus is the other - to rotate in a direction opposite most of the planets. This tilt makes the seasonal changes on Uranus extreme. During winter and summer, even though the planet continues to rotate at regular17-hour intervals, the summer side faces constantly towards the sun, and the winter side stays in complete darkness.
As the seasons change to spring and fall and sunlight touches partsof the planet that haven't seen light for 21 years, the weather begins to change, causing an increase in storms and cloud formations, with winds of up to 560 miles or 900 kilometersper hour recorded. Only one spacecraft has ever flown by Uranus: Voyager 2, which passed the planet in 1986. It just so happened that at that time the northern hemisphere of Uranus was in winter, and so the images that Voyager 2 recorded were of an almost feature less blue planet.
In the years since then, the seasons have changed, and Uranus has revealed more interesting weather patterns. Although it is possible to see Uranus with the unaided eye in good viewing conditions, it was never recognized by ancient people as a planet because it was so dim and moved so slowly. It was Sir William Herschel who first recognized that it was not a star in 1781, making Uranus the first planet to be discovered with a telescope.
At first, Herschel named it 'Georgium Sidus,' or 'George's Star'in honor of King George III, but other astronomers felt that the planet's name should stay inline with the mythological origins of the other planets. The name Uranus was selected, after the Greek god of the sky, and less than 70 years after its discovery Uranus is what the planet was universally called. Uranus has a system of 13 faint rings, and27 moons circling around it. William Herschel first claimed to see a ring around Uranus in 1789, but rings were not confirmed until nearly 200 years later in 1977. Herschel also discovered two of the planet's 5 large moons. Some of Uranus's small moons were still being discovered as recently as the early 21st century!
There is no knowing what future discoveries are in store from this mysterious planet, but scientists continue to study and observe in an attempt to understand it.
I hope you enjoyed learning about Uranus, the side ways planet.
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