Current:Home > FinanceVoyager 2 is the only craft to visit Uranus. Its findings may have misled us for 40 years. -TrueNorth Capital Hub
Voyager 2 is the only craft to visit Uranus. Its findings may have misled us for 40 years.
View
Date:2025-04-18 21:03:56
- Much of our understanding of Uranus comes from Voyager 2's flyby, which to date remains the only time a spacecraft has visited the planet.
- Voyager 2's data on the magnetosphere surrounding Uranus has for decades left scientists perplexed.
- As a result, Uranus earned a decades-long reputation as an outlier in our solar system. But new research may be flipping that understanding on its head.
A lone spacecraft's visit to Uranus may have left us with the complete wrong impression of the ice giant for nearly 40 years.
The strange, sideways-rotating planet – the third largest in our solar system – has always been something of a mystery to astronomers. But when Voyager 2 got an up-close look at Uranus in 1986, scientists were able to glean some insights that, while confounding, at least shed some light on a crucial characteristic that seemed to set the planet apart from other giants like Jupiter.
Or so they thought.
A fresh look at the data collected during the Voyager 2 flyby revealed that the probe's visit to Uranus may have accidentally coincided with a rare interstellar event. The findings, published Monday in a study in the journal Nature Astronomy, suggest that our understanding of the planet's protective magnetic field, or magnetosphere, may be flawed.
“If Voyager 2 had arrived just a few days earlier, it would have observed a completely different magnetosphere at Uranus,” said lead study author Jamie Jasinski, a physicist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, in a statement. “The spacecraft saw Uranus in conditions that only occur about 4% of the time.”
Perseverance:NASA's rover captures stunning vista of Jezero Crater on Mars
Voyager 2 visited Uranus in 1986
Much of our understanding of Uranus comes from Voyager 2's flyby, which to date remains the only time a spacecraft has visited the planet.
The probe, along with its Voyager 1 twin, launched in 1977 from Cape Canaveral, Florida to explore the far reaches of our solar system. The probes, which continue to travel billions of miles away, have both reached interstellar space – Voyager 1 in 2012 and Voyager 2 in 2018, according to NASA.
But long before that, Voyager 2 stopped by Uranus, coming within 50,600 miles of Uranus's cloudtops. While encountering the planet on Jan. 24, 1986, the probe returned detailed photos and other data on the world, its moons, magnetic field and dark rings.
Why were scientists interested in Uranus' magnetosphere?
Voyager 2's data on the magnetosphere surrounding Uranus has, for decades, left scientists perplexed.
Magnetospheres provide a protective bubble around planets with magnetic cores and magnetic fields, shielding them from the sun's harmful flow of gas (or plasma) streaming out in solar winds. Scientists have long been interested in learning about the magnetospheres of other planets in hopes of better understanding Earth's own.
What made Uranus' magnetosphere so strange were its radiation belts with an unexpected intensity rivaling that of Jupiter's.
Just as mystifying was the absence of plasma. The energetic ionized particles are common to other planets’ magnetospheres, and scientists had theorized that the five major Uranian moons in the magnetic bubble should have produced them.
Instead, the Voyager 2 findings forced them to conclude that the moons must be inactive.
Solar wind may have skewed Voyager data: Study
As a result, Uranus earned a decades-long reputation as an outlier in our solar system.
Now, new research may be flipping that understanding on its head.
Though it was far from intentional, Voyager 2's flyby may have taken place at the same time that some unusual space weather was squashing the planet's magnetic field – skewing the probe's data. Solar winds pounding the magnetosphere would have temporarily driven plasma out of the system while also ratcheting up the power of the magnetosphere, according to the study.
So, instead of getting a full picture of Uranus, scientists back on Earth were presented with a misleading "snapshot in time," said Linda Spilker, project scientist for the twin Voyager probes at JPL, in a statement.
What that means is those five major moons of Uranus may be active after all.
“This new work explains some of the apparent contradictions, and it will change our view of Uranus once again," said Spilker, who served as one of the mission scientists for Voyager 2 during its visit.
Will NASA now revisit Uranus?
The study’s authors say their research highlights how little we know about Uranus and how critical future missions to the planet may be.
A 2022 report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine called on NASA to make another mission to Uranus a priority in the next decade – something the space agency appears to have in the works.
In plans highlighted in a 2023 report from Scientific American, NASA would launch a spacecraft by 2032 that would orbit the planet and send a probe into its atmosphere.
Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at elagatta@gannett.com
veryGood! (85)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- DJ Akademiks, Off The Record podcast host, accused of rape and defamation
- Two 17-year-old American soldiers killed in Korean War accounted for after more than 70 years
- A cricket World Cup is coming to NYC’s suburbs, where the sport thrives among immigrant communities
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Best Luxury Candles That Will Make Your Home Smell Really, Really Good
- Soldier killed in non-combat training accident was 23-year-old Virginia man
- Justice Department to investigate Kentucky’s juvenile jails after use of force, isolation complaints
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Indigenous consultant accuses NHL’s Blackhawks of fraud, sexual harassment
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Supreme Court lets Louisiana use congressional map with new majority-Black district in 2024 elections
- 3 dead after small plane crashes in Tennessee
- U.S. military begins moving pieces of offshore pier to provide aid to Gaza
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- 2024 PGA Championship: When it is, how to watch, tee times for golf's second major of year
- NOAA detects another solar flare following sun-produced geomagnetic storm: 'Not done yet'
- Reports: Former five-star defensive back Cormani McClain transferring to Florida from Colorado
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Save Up to 70% on Gap Factory's Already Reduced Styles, Including $59 Vegan Leather Leggings for $11
An Arizona judge helped revive an 1864 abortion law. His lawmaker wife joined Democrats to repeal it
Kansas City Chiefs' Harrison Butker References Taylor Swift in Controversial Commencement Speech
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
Officials searching for a missing diver in Florida recover another body instead
Creighton's Baylor Scheierman among standouts in NBA draft combine scrimmages
Meta to shut down Workplace app for business