Uranus Emits More Heat Than Previously Estimated

0
8KB

When Voyager 2 flew past Uranus in 1986, the spacecraft detected a surprisingly low level of internal heat from the planet. Since then, scientists believed Uranus to be the odd one out in our solar system’s family of giant planets—the others being Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune—who all tend to emit more heat than they absorb from sunlight.

Now, a new study suggests that scientists may have had the wrong idea about Voyager 2’s data: Uranus does have an internal heat source similar to its planetary siblings. For the study, published Monday in Geophysical Research Letters, researchers analyzed decades of archival data available on the ice giant, finding that Uranus emits 12.5% more internal heat than it absorbs from the Sun. 

That’s still considerably less heat than the other three giant planets, which emit more than 100% of the solar energy they receive. Nevertheless, the study demonstrates that Uranus doesn’t stray too far from scientists’ general understanding of how giant planets form and evolve. 

To reach this conclusion, the researchers analyzed data on Uranus’s global energy balance across one full orbit of the Sun, which takes 84 years. The team took this observational data and combined it with computational models, finding big seasonal swings driven by the planet’s wild changes in sunlight exposure. The new findings are consistent with an earlier paper about Uranus’s energy balance, published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society in May.

That said, neither study offers a clear answer as to why Uranus’s internal heat is much lower than the other gas and ice giants. Uranus may have had a “different interior structure or evolutionary history compared to the other giant planets,” the researchers noted in a statement. The study also found that Uranus’s energy levels change according to its 20-year-long seasons. These fluctuations, along with the planet’s heat budget, “provide observational constraints that can be used to develop theories of planetary formation for giant planets,” the study states. 

Thus, the paper both answers and raises questions about Uranus, which the researchers cite as a good reason for future NASA missions to investigate the icy planet further. 

“By uncovering how Uranus stores and loses heat, we gain valuable insights into the fundamental processes that shape planetary atmospheres, weather systems, and climate systems,” said Liming Li, study co-author and physicist at the University of Houston, in the release. “These findings help broaden our perspective on Earth’s atmospheric system and the challenges of climate change.”

Like
Love
Haha
3
Suche
Kategorien
Mehr lesen
News
Bắt đầu tiết kiệm 'tiền dưỡng già' ở độ tuổi nào lý tưởng nhất?
Tuổi nào nên tiết kiệm tiền dưỡng già? Một khảo sát...
Von GlitterBloom09 2025-08-20 05:35:04 0 8KB
Science
Researchers Find Strange Link Between Marathon Running and Cancer
Some of the most physically fit people in the world...
Von Buckwheat333 2025-08-19 21:26:04 0 9KB
Xã Hội
N:ạn nh:ân 'tố' bị thu 4,2 triệu/cuốc xe ở Hà Nội òa khóc kể 2 lần bị thu tiền
Sau nhiều ngày mệt mỏi và hoảng loạn trong hành trình đưa con đi khám bệnh, đêm 15/6, hai người...
Von HellyValentine 2025-06-16 04:51:11 0 11KB
Food
 Steak Bowl with Sweet Potato Fries & Creamy Sauce 
 Steak Bowl with Sweet Potato Fries & Creamy Sauce Ingredients:For the Steak:1 lb...
Von cehrui 2024-10-07 15:14:46 0 26KB
News
Dừng xe mặc áo mưa khi đang đi trên đường sẽ bị phạt đến 5.000.000 đồng trong trường hợp nào?
Dừng xe mặc áo mưa bị phạt khi nào? Theo đó, kể cả...
Von neon16 2025-08-19 05:11:11 0 8KB