|
Uranus
Note: You can click on each image below to view a larger version.
ABOVE RIGHT: Uranus as seen by Voyager 2, the only spacecraft to have visited it so far. Visually, Uranus appeared bland, with pale blue clouds in which very few features could be seen. However more recent pictures from the Hubble Space Telescope seem to show greater activity in the atmosphere, suggesting that this varies from season to season. Uranus, Neptune and Pluto are the only three planets which were not known in antiquity (although of course Pluto is no longer classified as a planet). All the others are so bright that early peoples could easily see that they changed their position in the sky from night to night, and were thus somehow different from the other stars. The word planet originally meant "wandering star." Uranus was discovered in 1781 by William Herschel, who although originally from Hanover in Germany spent much of his life in Bath, England. Herschel wasn't actually looking for a new planet, he simply came across it while doing a survey of the sky, but the discovery was a sensation that made him extremely famous. He was also the best telescope-maker of his day, which contributed a lot to his success as an astronomer. Some astronomers had in fact seen Uranus before, but since their telescopes hadn't been powerful enough to show it as anything other than a point of light they had assumed that it was just a star. Indeed, Herschel at first reported it as a rather odd comet.
Miranda is a moon with a very unusual landscape, since it has such a huge variety of features: cratered plains, ridges, valleys, and huge ice cliffs. The strangest of all are two areas of bizarre grooves and ridges, nicknamed "the race-track" and "the chevron". It is not at all clear how such a jumble of terrain could have come about, and it has even been suggested that Miranda may have been broken up by an impact and then re-formed. |
||||||
|
Last Updated: 1 Oct 07 URL: http://www.randomnotes.co.uk/Astronomy/Uranusprint.htm |