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Uranus

Planet Solar System Mag 5.3

Datos del Objeto

Designación del Catálogo
Uranus
Tipo
Planet
Constelación
Solar System
Magnitud
5.3
Distancia
2,870,932,737 años luz
Tamaño Angular
4

Acerca de Uranus

Descripción

Uranus is the seventh planet from el Sol, orbiting at 19.2 AU. It is an ice giant with a diameter of 51,118 km (four times Earth's), composed primarily of water, methane, and ammonia ices surrounding a small rocky core. Methane in the upper atmosphere absorbs red light, giving Uranus its distinctive pale blue-green color. The planet's most remarkable feature is its extreme axial tilt of 97.8 degrees — it essentially rolls around el Sol on its side, likely the result of a massive collision early in its history. This means its poles take turns pointing almost directly at el Sol during its 84-year orbit. Uranus has 28 known moons and a faint ring system discovered in 1977.

Consejos de Observación

At magnitude 5.7, Uranus is technically visible to the simple vista under perfect conditions, but you need a chart to distinguish it from a faint star. Prismaticos make it easy to find once you know where to look — it appears as a star-like point with a slight blue-green tint. A telescopio at 100-200x reveals a tiny disk of about 3.5-4 segundos de arco, distinctly non-stellar and with a subtle blue-green hue that confirms the identification. Surface detail is essentially invisible de la Tierra even in the largest amateur telescopios. The five brightest moons (Titania, Oberon, Ariel, Umbriel, and Miranda) require at least an 8-10 inch telescopio to glimpse. Uranus moves slowly through the zodiac, spending about 7 years in each constellation.

Historia

Uranus was the first planet discovered using a telescopio. William Herschel found it on March 13, 1781, during a systematic survey of the sky from his garden in Bath, England. He initially thought it was a comet. The planet was eventually named after the ancient Greek god of the sky. Its ring system was discovered in 1977 during a stellar occultation observed from an airborne telescopio. Voyager 2 is the only spacecraft to have visited Uranus, flying past in January 1986 and revealing its moons, rings, and extreme axial tilt in detail. A dedicated Uranus orbiter mission has been recommended as a top priority for future exploration.

Datos Curiosos

Because of its extreme tilt, a single 'day' at Uranus's poles lasts 42 Earth years of continuous sunlight followed by 42 years of darkness. Uranus is the coldest planet in the sistema solar, with atmospheric temperatures dropping to -224°C — even colder than more distant Neptune — possibly because it radiates almost no internal heat. All 28 of its moons are named after characters from the works of William Shakespeare and Alexander Pope.

Fotos de la Comunidad (1)

Credit: Ardenau4. License: CC0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: Ardenau4. License: CC0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Feb 28, 2026