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New Study On Moons of Uranus Raises Chance of Life

(Wednesday November 13, 2024 @05:00AM (BeauHD) from the not-as-sterile-as-once-thought dept.)


A new analysis of data from NASA's Voyager 2 mission reveals that the planet Uranus and its five largest moons [1]might harbor subsurface oceans and potential conditions for life . The BBC reports:

> Much of what we know about them was gathered by Nasa's Voyager 2 spacecraft which visited nearly 40 years ago. But a new analysis shows that Voyager's visit coincided with a powerful solar storm, which led to a misleading idea of what the Uranian system is really like. [...] So, for 40 years we have had an incorrect view of what Uranus and its five largest moons are normally like, according to Dr William Dunn of University College London. "These results suggest that the Uranian system could be much more exciting than previously thought. There could be moons there that could have the conditions that are necessary for life, they might have oceans below the surface that could be teeming with fish!".

>

> It has been nearly 40 years since Voyager 2 last flew past the icy world and its moons. Nasa has plans to launch a new mission, the Uranus Orbiter and Probe, to go back for a closer look in 10 years' time. According to Nasa's Dr Jamie Jasinski, whose idea it was to re-examine the Voyager 2 data, the mission will need to take his results into account when designing its instruments and planning the scientific survey. "Some of the instruments for the future spacecraft are very much being designed with ideas from what we learned from Voyager 2 when it flew past the system when it was experiencing an abnormal event. So we need to rethink how exactly we are going to design the instruments on the new mission so that we can best capture the science we need to make discoveries." Nasa's Uranus probe is expected to arrive by 2045, which is when scientists hope to find out whether these far-flung icy moons, once thought of as being dead worlds, might have the possibility of being home to life.

The findings have been [2]published in the journal Nature Astronomy .



[1] https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgk1333k0ypo

[2] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-024-02389-3



It must be said (Score:2)

by LondoMollari ( 172563 )

I always knew there could be Klingons on Uranus.

Re: (Score:2)

by Rei ( 128717 )

I can't tell you how mad I am at Bode for not knowing his Roman mythology correctly (the planet should have been named Caelus).

That said, a lot of the alternative names people were pushing for at the time were even more absurd, including, among others, Georgium Sidus ("(King) George's Star"), Neptune George III, and Neptune Great Britain. :P

Halley's comet (Score:2)

by backslashdot ( 95548 )

Why aren't we planning to put a rover on Halley's Comet .. before it starts gassing up.

Yes, I know this is off topic .. but we need to start pushing for that now. So the probe can be launched in time to meet up with it a few decades before the thing gets surrounded with dust and fog.

The carbonyl is polarized,
The delta end is plus.
The nucleophile will thus attack,
The carbon nucleus.
Addition makes an alcohol,
Of types there are but three.
It makes a bond, to correspond,
From C to shining C.
-- Prof. Frank Westheimer, to "America the Beautiful"