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James Webb Delivers First 3D Map of Uranus’s Upper Atmosphere

The vertical profile reveals how the planet’s tilted, offset magnetic field sculpts its auroras.

Overview

  • An international team led by Paola Tiranti used JWST’s NIRSpec to track faint ionospheric emission through nearly a full Uranian rotation, mapping up to about 5,000 kilometers above the cloud tops.
  • Temperatures peak between roughly 3,000 and 4,000 kilometers in altitude, while ion densities maximize near 1,000 kilometers, with clear longitudinal variations tied to magnetic geometry.
  • Webb identified two bright auroral bands near the magnetic poles and a depleted zone of emission and ion density between them, a feature consistent with transitions in magnetic field lines.
  • The measurements confirm a continued cooling of the upper atmosphere since the early 1990s, with an average temperature near 426 kelvins that is lower than previous ground or spacecraft readings.
  • The results, drawn from GO program 5073 using NIRSpec’s Integral Field Unit on January 19, 2025, refine ice-giant energy balance models and offer benchmarks for interpreting giant exoplanet atmospheres.