First X-rays from Uranus

Video Player

Video Versions


Credits are currently embedded within the video and will be added to the Library in the near future. Check back soon!

(DESCRIPTION)
Text, News From The Universe. April 8, 2021
 
First X-rays from Uranus
 
The ice giant planet Uranus is the only planet in the Solar System that rotates on its side.
 
(SPEECH)
[COSMIC MUSIC]
 
(DESCRIPTION)
This unique orientation makes the first detections of X-rays from Uranus all the more intriguing.
 
X-ray light detected by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, shown in pink, has a few potential sources.
 
Image, a pink bulge sits centered on Uranus' equator.

Text, Scattered X-ray light from the Sun is a likely source.
 
The X-rays could be emitted when energetic particles collide with the planet's rings, as on Saturn.
 
Or, the X-rays may be from Uranus' auroras, which are more complex than usual, due to the planet's tilt.
 
These first X-ray detections are the beginning of a new way of understanding one of the most unique planets in our solar system.
 
This news was brought to you in part by the Chandra X-ray Center in Cambridge, MA