Here is a trivia question: How many planets are
visible without a telescope? Most will answer "five" (Mercury, Venus,
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn). Some might answer "six" and include the
Earth in the mix. Six, in fact, is the correct number, but if you exclude our
own world, there is indeed one other planet that can be spied without optical
aid: the planet
Uranus.
This week will be a fine time to try and seek it out,
especially since it is now favorably placed for viewing in our evening sky and
the waxing moon is not overly bright.
Of course, you'll have to know exactly where to look
for it. Barely discernable by a keen naked eye on very dark, clear nights, Uranus
currently shining at magnitude +5.7 is now visible during the evening hours
among the stars of Aquarius, the Water Carrier. On this scale, larger numbers
are dimmer, with magnitude 6.0 being about the dimmest object visible under
ideal, dark-sky conditions.
Tilted giant
It is best to study the accompanying chart first, and then
scan that region with binoculars. Using a magnification of 150 power with a
telescope of at least three-inch aperture, you should be able to resolve it
into a tiny, pale-green featureless disk.
Uranus, which currently lies 1.868 billion miles (3.005
billion kilometers) from the sun, has a diameter of about 31,700 miles (51,120
kilometers) and according to flyby magnetic data from Voyager 2 in 1986, has a
rotation period of 17.4 hours.
At last count, Uranus has 27 moons, all
lying in orbits around the planet's equator in which there is also a complex of
nine narrow, nearly opaque rings, which were discovered in 1978.
Uranus likely has a rocky core, surrounded by a liquid
mantle of water, methane, and ammonia, encased in an atmosphere of hydrogen and
helium. A bizarre feature is how far over Uranus is tipped. Its north pole lies
98 degrees from being directly perpendicular to its orbit plane. Thus, its
seasons are extreme: When the sun rises at its north pole, it stays up for 42
Earth-years; then it sets and the north pole is in darkness for 42 Earth-years.
Fortuitous find
The British astronomer Sir William Herschel discovered
Uranus on March 13, 1781, noting that it was moving slowly through the
constellation Gemini. Initially, however, Herschel thought he had discovered a
new comet.
Soon the name of Herschel became known over all of Europe together with the news of his discovery. King George III, who loved the sciences,
had the astronomer presented to him, and bestowed upon him a life pension and a
residence at Slough, in the neighborhood of Windsor Castle.
Eventually it was determined that Herschel's
"comet" was, in fact, a new planet. For a while, it actually bore
Herschel's name. Herschel himself proposed the name Georgium Sidus "The
Star of George," after his benefactor. However, the custom of using mythological names ultimately prevailed and the new planet was finally
christened Uranus. Prior to its discovery, the outermost planet was considered
to be Saturn, named for the ancient god of time and destiny, but Uranus was the
father of Saturn and considered the most ancient deity of all.
It probably was for all for the best. After all, if Herschel's
request was granted, just think of how we might have listed the planets in
order from the sun: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and . . .
George?