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It’s funny. There are eight planets in this solar system and Neptune is the farthest from the sun. Yet it still releases more heat than Uranus, planet No. 7. Four times wider than Earth, Uranus is also about 14.5 times as massive as the world we live on. After Jupiter and Saturn, it’s the biggest planet in the sun’s orbit.

Scientists have coined an appropriate term for large, chilly bodies like Uranus: ice giants. Good old Neptune falls into the same category, but Uranus is quite an odd duck compared to its neighbor planet. For starters, Uranus spins on an extreme tilt, resulting in some crazy seasons around the poles.

Even the ice giant’s name is a bit peculiar, and not just because it makes schoolboys chuckle.

Long Live the King
OK, let’s not kid ourselves. You’re never too old to enjoy a good Uranus joke. Headline writers certainly don’t think so, if article titles like “NASA Wants to Probe Uranus in Search of Gas” and “Uranus Smells Like Farts” are any indication.

English-speakers tend to pronounce “Uranus” in one of two ways. Some folks say, “urine us,” but most prefer the alternative which sounds like “your anus.” Comedy gold, right?

(In a bid to minimize rectum comments, Planetary Society blogger Emily Lakdawalla has trained students to point and shout “You’re a nuss!” when the name is dropped.)

Puns aside, Uranus represents a break with nomenclatural tradition. Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune all took their names from Roman gods or deities. However, Uranus — uniquely — was named after a Greek god.

In the religion of ancient Greece, Uranus was revered as the primordial god of the sky. He had a son named Cronos and a (more famous) grandson known as Zeus. These figures were later conflated with two Roman deities: Saturn and Jupiter.

Though the planet Uranus was discovered by astronomer William Herschel March 13, 1781, he didn’t give it the name we use today. A loyal Briton, Herschel wanted to call this faraway world Georgium Sidus — or “George’s Star”— in honor of King George III.

By nature that name was politically charged. To avoid alienating non-British stargazers, German astronomer Johann Elert Bode suggested calling the planet “Uranus” in 1783. Eventually, his alternative moniker won out.

Uranus
This image shows a representation Uranus’ magnetic field. The yellow arrow points to the sun, the light blue arrow marks Uranus’ magnetic axis, and the dark blue arrow marks Uranus’ rotation axis.
NASA/SCIENTIFIC VISUALIZATION STUDIO/TOM BRIDGMAN
Spinning Sideways
Bode may have been German, but the planet he named looks like it’s trapped in a Dutch angle.

Planets rotate around an axis, the line connecting their northern and southern poles. And speaking of spin cycles, you probably know that all the planets in this solar system are simultaneously orbiting the sun.

Now Earth has an axial tilt of 23.5 degrees. This means there’s a 23.5-degree angle between Earth’s axis and its plane of orbit around the sun. Without the tilt, our home world wouldn’t have seasons (or possibly life).

Uranus is skewed, too — but to a much greater extent. In relation to its orbital plane, the ice giant’s axis has been tilted at a jaw-dropping 97.7-degree angle.

Next to Saturn and Neptune, Uranus looks like its lying on its side. What’s up with the weird orientation? A computer simulation published in 2018 suggests Uranus was hit by a huge proto-planet around 4 billion years ago. Supposedly, this collision gave the ice giant its exaggerated tilt. Then again, perhaps there were multiple impacts. A long-gone circumplanetary disk might’ve also played a role here.

The tilt subjects both poles to long, dark winters and long, bright summers. One year on Uranus lasts for roughly 84 Earth years. Each pole is aimed almost directly at the sun — for about 21 straight Earth years — during its summer season. Meanwhile, the other pole faces the opposite direction, enduring a sunlight-free winter.

The Planet’s Sights and Smells
Despite the extreme tilt, Uranus is warmer at the equator than it is at either pole. Nobody knows why, and this isn’t the planet’s only mystery. Jupiter, Saturn and Neptune all radiate more than twice as much heat as they receive from the sun. Yet Uranus’s heat output is significantly lower. The disparity has long baffled planetary scientists.

As we already mentioned, Uranus and Neptune are both ice giants. Planets of this sort have rocky cores covered by mantles rich in ammonia, methane and icy water. Next up, there’s the atmosphere, whose outer level is full of hydrogen, helium and even more methane.

Researchers have found that Uranus’s atmospheric clouds contain hydrogen sulfide, a compound responsible for the rotten egg stench we all know and hate. So yes, Uranus literally stinks.

To boot, the densest part of its atmosphere sees brutal temperatures of -243 to -370 degrees Fahrenheit (-153 to -218 degrees Celsius). That’s hardly a welcoming environment for future astronauts.

At least the color scheme would be familiar. Earth isn’t the only “blue planet” in this solar system: Methane absorbs red light, giving Uranus and Neptune deep-blue complexions. Of the two worlds, Uranus looks slightly greener.

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