Interesting Facts About Uranus, the Seventh Planet in our Solar System and the first planet to be discovered in modern time

Uranus Photos and Planetary Symbol
Left: true-color image. Center: false-color image, emphasizing the slightly visible cloud bands. The small ring-shaped spots are optical artifacts. Right: Symbol for the planet Uranus.
The Facts
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Position in the solar system: 7th planet from the sun
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Closest distance to the sun: Perihelion: 2.741x10^9 km (1.704x10^9 mi)
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Furthest distance from the sun: Aphelion: 3.004x10^9 km (1.867x10^9 mi)
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Minimum Distance to Earth: 2.589x10^9 km (1.609x10^9 mi)
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Uranian day: 17 hr 14 min 24 sec
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Uranian year: 84.011 Earth years
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Axis tilt: 97.77°
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Orbital Inclination to ecliptic: 0.77°
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Orbital Eccentricity: 0.046
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Diameter (equatorial): 51,118 km; (31,770 mi)
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Mass: 8.68x10^25 kg (1.90x10^26 lb.), approx. 14.5 times that of Earth
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Gravity: .905 (Earth = 1)
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Escape Velocity: 21.3 km/s (13.2 mi/s)
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Temperature: -197°C at 1.0 bar pressure
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Mean Surface pressure: >1000 bar
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Atmospheric Composition: 82.5% hydrogen, 15.2% helium, 2.3% methane, with a minor amount of hydrogen deuteride (“heavy” hydrogen) and aerosolized ammonia ice, water ice, ammonia hydrosulfide, and methane ice
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Number of moons: 27
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Ringed system? Yes
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Magnetic Field? Yes
Uranus Amazing Facts!
- Most tilted axis of the planets: Greater than a right angle at nearly 98° (or 82° if the rotation is considered retrograde), Uranus appears to lie almost on its side relative to its orbit.
- First planet discovered since the ancients: Sir William Herschel observed the planet on March 13, 1781, using a telescope. German astronomer Johann Elert Bode named it after the Greek god of the sky, Ouranos (“Uranos” is the Latin version of the Greek name). Though it is barely visible to the naked eye, the ancients did not recognize that Uranus is a planet because of its dimness and its very slow movement through the sky, a result of its long year.
Uranus Rings and Moons: False Color Images
Credits
Uranus Fact Sheet (NASA): https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/uranusfact.html
Uranus true and false color images taken by the Voyager 2 spacecraft (https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/image/planetary/uranus/uranus_true_and_false.jpg)
Uranus and moons image taken by the Hubble space telescope (https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/multimedia/gallery/Uranus_Moons-browse.jpg)