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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

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A spot on Uranus

Posted: Thursday, August 31, 2006 3:25 PM by Alan Boyle

No, it's not some astronomer's idea of a rude joke: Rather, the Hubble Space Telescope has captured a rare view of one of Uranus' satellites, Ariel, floating over the planet and casting a shadow on the cloud tops.

Just how rare is it? Such an event is only possible only every 42 years, due to Uranus' bizarre sideways rotation.


NASA / ESA / UW-Madison
In this picture of Uranus, the bright spot is the moon
Ariel, casting a shadow on the planet's cloud tops.

We can see moons transiting planets like Saturn and Jupiter relatively often, because those moons move straight through the solar system's ecliptic plane. But because Uranus and its moons turn sideways, from “north” to “south,” the planet’s equator has to line up precisely with the sun to provide the view seen by Hubble last month. That occurs twice during Uranus' orbit, which takes 84 Earth years.

Earthlings have never seen this phenomenon before, said Lawrence Sromovsky, a senior scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Space Science and Engineering Center. Smorovsky and his colleagues happened upon the transit while they were using Hubble to study Uranus' atmosphere.

"The technology wasn't there to see this the last time it happened," he explained.

Smorovsky told me it could well happen again in October, when his team will be watching Uranus using the Keck Telescope in Hawaii. This is a good time to study how Uranus' cloud climate is changing, because the sideways planet's north and south poles are both visible and illuminated at the same time, he said.

If an observer were able to watch Ariel pass over from Uranus' cloud tops, they'd experience the event as a solar eclipse unlike any on Earth, Smorovsky noted. "The sun looks like a bright star, so the shadows are sharper than they are on Earth," he said.

This graphic accompanying today's image release from the Space Telescope Science Institute illustrates the differences between Uranian and earthly eclipses. Note the fuzzy dark spot on the Sahara, which represents the umbra and penumbra of a solar eclipse.

Another graphic shows how the orientations of the Uranian moons change over time - and you'll definitely want to check out these cool online videos showing the movement of the moons back in 1994.

Now, about those rings around Uranus...

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The linked-to article mentions:
> The last time a Uranian equinox occurred,
> when transits could have been observed,
> was in 1965. However, telescopes of that
> era did not have the image sharpness required
> to view satellite transits on Uranus.

Of course this picture was by Hubble, although the sharpness of Earth-based telescopes has increased so much that I suspect it could be one with one of those (even the Palomar 200" telescope, which was around in 1965).

In fact, if you've seen pictures amateurs have taken with their little telescopes (under 20") and compare them with photos taken by the best large telescopes not too many decades ago, it's striking how much clearer the amateurs' pictures are.  For example, http://media.skytonight.com/images/Mars_12oct2005.jpg, or the pictures of Saturn at http://www.licha.de/photo_reference.php?id=1&val=7.  I think there might be a story here...  Maybe an amateur could even image the transit of Uranus.
If I read Mr. Maxwell's comment correctly, he is positing a new solar system!  Isn't a transit the movement of an object between the Earth and the Sun?  Even if we allow the definition to include a passage of an object (Ariel) between the Earth and some other object (Uranus), the transit would be Ariel's.

Considering the quality of some "amateur" equipment, I suspect he is right.  Anybody got the money for a prize?

-I downloaded the NASA image of Uranus. I then opened the image of Uranus in Adobe PhotoShop and extended the image size of Uranus to 46 x 46 inches. It appears that "the spot" is a group of Klingons.
See, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klingon
-I then enhanced the image using "Kai's Photo Soap" Photoshop plugin. See, http://graphicssoft.about.com/
od/whathappenedto/p/photosoap.htm

-The Klingons were removed immediately using "Photo Soap".
-I uploaded a copy to the NASA Photo Archive and I saved one copy to use as desktop wallpaper.
-The extent of the Klingon Empire should never be underestimated and Uranus should be inspected at least once a week for these invasive lifeforms.
So, althought, at first, it looked like a "spot" it was actually Klingons on Uranus!
-It is my hope that this analysis is valuable.
FWIW (a matter of definitions), Wade Whitlock's comment on my use of "transit": first, the original article used it.  Second, here are the list of definitions of "transit" at http://www.enchantedlearning.com/
subjects/astronomy/glossary/indext.shtml
:

1. Transit is when a smaller body passes in front of a larger one (for example, when an object passes between the Sun and the Earth). During this time, the object seems to be crossing the disk of the Sun. The only planets that ever pass between the Earth and the Sun are Mercury and Venus (since they are closer to the Sun than the Earth). Therefore, the only planets that can produce a transit are Mercury and Venus.

2. Transit is the passage of a moon in front of its primary.

3. Transit is the passage of an object across an observer's meridian.

Whitlock is referring to def'n 1, or at least to the given example (the actual def'n doesn't require the transited object to be the Sun).  In any case, def'n 2 fits my usage just fine.  (There are plenty of similar definitions of "transit" out on the web that include def'n 2.)
Ok, once and for all, guys..."URANUS", originally the name of the Titan "OURANOS" is not a "lettinized" Greek word, to be pronounced like "YOUR-inn-us". Nor is it a "laytinized" word to be pronounced like "your-RAIN-us". It is, in fact, a LATINized word...and thus prounced "you-RAN-us", as in "Sherrif, we thought we were the baddest space-cowboys, but 'URANUS' clear outta town!"

I realize this will spoil the afternoon of some pre-pubescent boys, but as a fellow with a classical education which led to astronomy, it has been an, ahem, sore point with me.



it's a birthmark
good job at finding a spot, we might find more answers and clues now
okay, great we found a spot, but do we know what the spot is, what the surface of the planet looks like. it's great questions are being answered, but too many questions are still unanswered
From an episode of Futurama

Professor: "I'm sorry, Fry, but astronomers renamed Uranus in 2620 to end that stupid joke once and for all."
Fry: "Oh. What's it called now?"
Professor: "Urectum. Here, let me locate it for you."
Pictures of Mice ? ---- I Do Not think so, Rather Sperm looking for a Egg/ Planet !
Some one just does'nt have an Imagination.
I'm still traumatized by the exclusion of Pluto. But I've always thought the strange orbit of Uranus to be fascinating, akin to a Mobius strip, right side up, turned sideways and back again... and I love the color!


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