An Voyager 2 mission review has revealed that Uranus is not as described

Uranus, the planet that orbits side, has always been the weirdo of our solar system. Since NASA’s voyager 2 probe survived him in 1986astronomers have dealt with a disconcerting mystery: unlike their gaseous Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune, Uranus seemed not to have an important internal heat source. It was, in appearance, an inert and energetically dead world. But that idea has just jumped through the air. A little context. In January 1986, the Voyager 2 probe became the first and only ship to visit Uranus, giving us the most iconic images of the planet and the data that laid the foundations of everything we know about him. One of the most important was its energy balance, the heat it emits with respect to the sun. The giant planets have an immense mass, so they retain a considerable amount of the heat of their formation and release it over billions of years. This internal heat flow is evident in Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune. However, the Iris instrument of Voyager 2 told a very different story about Uranus. According to a 1990 study, the planet issued an almost identical amount of energy to what it received from the sun: the internal heat flow was statistically indistinguishable from zero. Uranus thus became the anomaly of the Solar System: an ice cream giant that, for some reason, had cooled much faster or formed in a completely different way from the other planets. I wasn’t dead. Nor of Parranda. A New study led by researchers from the Houston University It has finally resolved the mystery. After analyzing decades of data, scientists have shown that Uranus does emit more heat than he receives from the Sun. It is not the inert planet we thought, but a dynamic world with an internal engine That, although modest, is very present in the energy balance. The error was not in the measurements of Voyager 2, but in the interpretation of a single snapshot over time. This is where the new study led by Xinyue Wang and Liming Li, from the University of Houston. Instead of based only on the overflow of 1986, his team compiled and analyzed data from a much longer period (from 1946 to 2030), covering almost a complete orbit of Uranus, which lasts 84 terrestrial years. Uranus is a planet of extremes. Its rotation axis is inclined 97.7 degrees, so it basically rolls on its orbit. Combined with a remarkably long orbit, it causes extreme stations that last about 21 years each, with a hemisphere bathed by continuous sunlight while the other remains in an icy darkness. The researchers discovered that this seasonal cycle is the key to everything. The solar energy that absorbs the planet is not constant, but varies significantly throughout its year. The 1986 analyzes, made near the winter solstice of the northern hemisphere, did not capture the complete image. By averaging the energy balance throughout the orbit, the results are unequivocal: Uranus consistently emits 12.5% more energy than he receives from the sun. Not so weird bug. Uranus now fits much better in the formation models of giant planets. It has an internal engine, although it is weaker than that of its neighbors, which suggests that its evolution was more similar to that of the rest of what was thought. This finding not only changes our understanding about how giant planets are formed and evolved, but also arrives at the right time, when Both NASA as China prepare missions To visit it. If the question is why Voyager 2 obtained such a misleading image of the planet, the answer is simply bad luck. In the days before the 1986 overfather, the Sun bombed Uranus with An unusually powerful geomagnetic storm. This phenomenon compressed the magnetosphere of the planet, which caused the ship to capture data in a day of extreme conditions. Image | NASA/Erich Karkoschka In Xataka | “A world with rings and moons”: NASA announces that James Webb has captured an enigmatic image of Uranus

After 48 years, Voyager probes are running out of plutonium. So NASA has taken extreme measures

The emblematic Voyager 1 space probes and Voyager 2, launched almost 50 years ago, are running out of energy. In order not to lose them, NASA has made the decision to turn off two other instruments to extend its useful life. One less instrument in each Voyager. Last February 25, NASA reveals nowthe mission team turned off the cosmic rays subsystem of the Voyager 1 probe, which studied high -energy particles in the interstellar space. The instrument has been doing science all this time and in 2020 allowed first How electrons from the sun accelerate when bouncing in shock waves as they move outside the solar system. Voyager 1 is the object manufactured by humans that is farther from earth and that has been going into the interstellar space more time. On March 24, NASA will also turn off the instrument that measures low -energy loaded particles in the Voyager 2. These movements seek to reduce the energy consumption of the probes, which depend on a radioisotope generator whose plutonium is running out. Both lose about 4 watts of power every year. There are hardly any operational instruments. NASA has been turning off the functions of the Voyager to prolong your useful life. Of the 10 scientific instruments Originals, only three will continue to function in each of the twin probes, one of them for just a few months: The magnetometer: measures the strength and direction of the magnetic field in the confines of the solar system, helping to understand how the magnetic field of the sun and the magnetic field of interstellar space interact The plasma wave subsystem: detects electromagnetic and plasma waves, providing information on the density and plasma temperature in interstellar space In the Voyager 1, the instrument of low -energy loaded particles, which NASA plans to also deactivate at the end of 2025. In the Voyager 2, the cosmic rays subsystem, which will remain operational until 2026 A growing repair history. In May 2024, after six months without receiving legible scientific data due to the degradation of the internal memory of Voyager 1, NASA achieved restore information through a complex (And almost heroic) Software update. It had already passed in 2010 with Voyager 2, but on that occasion It was solved With a restart. Not only memory is failing. In September 2024, engineers had to light secondary propellants of the Voyager 1, inactive for decades, to correct the orientation of the probe due to an obstruction of its main engines, also the result of its longevity. The procedure implied careful temporal heating of inactive engines, but was successful and allowed to continue with the mission. NASA expects them to reach 2030. Suzanne Dodd, head of the Voyager project, said in a statement that turning off instruments is a crucial step to avoid the “premature” purpose of the mission. Thanks to these adjustments, both ships could continue to send scientific information at least until the 2030s, although with a progressive reduction of their abilities. As for the “premature”: the Voyager have widely overcome their original mission, whose initial plan was to explore Jupiter and Saturn. Thanks to excellence in their engineering and these constant adjustments, the ships have continued to work beyond what is expected, revealing unique information about interstellar space and heliopause, the region where the solar wind loses its influence. Images | POT In Xataka | The rescue of Voyager 1 has begun. With 8 kb of memory, a programming language of 1957 and an unimportant LAG

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