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Uranus Forever Changed By Collision With Massive Object, Study Says
Uranus Forever Changed By Collision With Massive Object, Study Says
Nov 18, 2024 10:27 AM

At a Glance

Uranus was forever changed after it collided with a massive object during the formation of the solar system some 4 billion years ago.Researchers say the cataclysmic collision gave the Ice Giant its atypical attributes.

Uranus was forever changed after it collided with a massive object during the formation of the solar system some 4 billion years ago, a new study says.

According to the study published this week in the Astrophysical Journal, the with an object twice the size of Earth billions of years ago.

The planet is unique for a number of reasons, including its extreme tilt.

"All of the planets in the solar system are spinning more or less in the same way … ," Jacob Kegerreis, the study's lead author and a researcher at Durham University's Institute for Computational Cosmology in the United Kingdom, told Space.com.

It's also unique because of its "very, very strange"magnetic field and because it's much colder than it should be, Kegerreis noted.

(MORE:)

The researchers tested and confirmed an older study, which said a massive object slammed into the planet, by using a high-powered supercomputer to simulate massive collisions.

“We ran more than 50 different impact scenarios using a high-powered supercomputer to see if we could recreate the conditions that shaped the planet’s evolution," Kegerreis said in a press release.

“Our findings confirm that the most likely outcome was that the young Uranus was involved in a cataclysmic collision with an object twice the mass of Earth, if not larger, knocking it on to its side and setting in process the events that helped create ,” he added.

The team's findings also provide insight into how the planet garnered its rings and numerous moons. Thesimulations suggest the impact withwhat was most likely a young proto-planet made of rock and ice could have "jettisoned rock and ice into orbit around the planet."

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