The Moons of Uranus
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The image at right is a composite of four images acquried by Voyager 2 in 1985 showing three moons of Uranus: Umbriel, lower left; Miranda, bottom right; Ariel, top right. At the time when this image was collected, only 5 moons of Uranus were known. Voyager 2 discovered 10 more moons in 1986, bringing the total to 15. |
![]() 12k JPEG NASA Press Release image #P-29313 |
| In the past few years, five new moons have been discovered orbiting Uranus, but not all of their names have been officially accepted by the International Astronomical Union. In 1997, two moons [Uranus XVI (Caliban) and XVII (Sycorax)] were discovered using the 200-inch Hale telescope at the Palomar Observatory in California, USA. In 1999, another three moons were discovered: Uranus XVIII (1986U10) was discovered while comparing images from Voyager 2 and the Hubble Space Telescope, and Uranus XIX(1999U1) and XX(1999U2) were discovered by astronomers using the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope at Mauna Kea. For the latest information on the acceptance of names for Uranian satellites, see the International Astronomical Union web site. | |
Uranian Satellites
(in order by distance from planet)
| Name | Discoverer | Diameter | Distance From Uranus |
Orbital Period (days) |
| Cordelia | Voyager 2, 1986 | 25 km/16 mi | 49,750 km/30,910 mi | .34 |
| Ophelia | Voyager 2, 1986 | 25 km/16 mi | 53,760 km/33,400 mi | .38 |
| Bianca | Voyager 2, 1986 | 45 km/28 mi | 59,160 km/36,760 mi | .44 |
| Cressida | Voyager 2, 1986 | 65 km/40 mi | 61,770 km/38,400 mi | .46 |
| Desdemona | Voyager 2, 1986 | 60 km/37 mi | 62,660 km/38,940 mi | .47 |
| Juliet | Voyager 2, 1986 | 85 km/53 mi | 64,360 km/40,000 mi | .49 |
| Portia | Voyager 2, 1986 | 110 km/68 mi | 66,100 km/41,070 mi | .51 |
| Rosalind | Voyager 2, 1986 | 60 km/37 mi | 69,930 km/43,500 mi | .56 |
| Belinda | Voyager 2, 1986 | 68 km/42 mi | 72,260 km/46,800 mi | .62 |
| Puck | Voyager 2, 1986 | 155 km/96 mi | 86,010 km/53,440 mi | .76 |
| Miranda | Kuiper, 1948 | 485 km/301 mi | 129,780 km/80,640 mi | 1.41 |
| Ariel | Lassell, 1851 | 1,160 km/721 mi | 191,240 km/118,800 mi | 2.52 |
| Umbriel | Lassell, 1851 | 1,190 km/739 mi | 265,970 km/165,300 mi | 4.14 |
| Titania | Herschel, 1787 | 1,610 km/1,000 mi | 435,840 km/270,800 mi | 8.71 |
| Oberon | Herschel, 1787 | 1,550 km/963 mi | 582,600 km/362,000 mi | 13.46 |
| 1997U1 (Caliban*) |
Gladman, Nicholson, Burns & Kavelaars, 1997 |
approx. 80km/49.6mi | 7,164,647km/4,442,081mi | 579.4 |
| 1999U1 | Gladman, Petie, Scholl, Kavelaars, Holman, 1999 | 20 km/12.4 mi | 10,000,000 km/6,200,000mi | n/a |
| 1997U2 (Sycorax*) |
Gladman, Nicholson, Burns & Kavelaars, 1997 |
approx. 160km/99.2mi | 12,174,687km/7,548,305mi | 1284 |
| 1999U2 | Gladman, Petie, Scholl, Kavelaars, Holman, 1999 | 20km/12.4 mi | 25,000,000 km/15,500,000mi | n/a |
| 1999U3 | Gladman, Petie, Scholl, Kavelaars, Holman, 1999 | 20km/12.4 mi | 10-25,000,000 km/6,200,000-15,500,000 mi | n/a |
| 2001U1 | Holman, Kavelaars, Gladman, Petie, 2001 | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| 2003U1 | Showalter and Lissauer, 2003 | 16 km/10 mi | 97,700 km 60,700 mi |
.92 |
| 2003U2 | Showalter and Lissauer, 2003 | 12 km/8 mi | 74,800 km 46,500 mi |
.62 |
| 1986U10 | Voyager 2, 1986 Karkoschka, 1999 |
40 km/25 mi | 75,000 km 46,600 mi |
.62 |
Uranus & Satellites
![]() 108k GIF NASA/JPL press release photo #P31143. |
Uranus and its five major moons are depicted in this montage of images acquired by the Voyager 2 spacecraft during its January 1986 flyby of the planet. The moons, counterclockwise from bottom right, are Ariel, Miranda, Titania, Oberon and Umbriel. |
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Miranda
The carved dark streaks on the surface of this icy moon turned out to be ridges and valleys in higher resolution images.
Titania
More Moons: Before the 1986 Voyager encounter, Uranus was known to have five moons. Those farthest from the planet have the highest density, and may consist of a silicate core covered by a thin, ice-rich crust. The moons show increasingly complex surface features closer to the planet. Ariel
Umbriel
Oberon
Ten new moons of Uranus were discovered by Voyager
in 1985 and 1986. Puck is only 77 kilometers (48 miles) across, and
is the largest of the ten. These ten minor satellites all circle Uranus
inside the orbit of Miranda. Uranus Facts
|| Seasons - South Pole || Rings
|| Moons ©2002 National Air and Space Museum
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