NASA releases new images of Uranus which could unravel mystery about planet
The images taken using NASA's James Webb Space Telescope are said to be the clearest yet of the ice giant - the seventh planet from the sun.
NASA has released stunning new images of Uranus which could help unravel a mysterious feature of the planet.
The images, taken using NASA's James Webb Space Telescope, show the planet's rings in more detail than they have ever been seen before.
Though the rings have been captured in previous images, these are said to be much clearer.
The images, which also include a wider shot showing Uranus and its 27 known moons, could help to solve a mystery about the ice giant, according to NASA.
That is because they show Uranus's polar cap, scientists say.
Commenting on the photograph, NASA said: "On the right side of the planet there's an area of brightening at the pole facing the sun, known as a polar cap.
"This polar cap is unique to Uranus - it seems to appear when the pole enters direct sunlight in the summer and vanish in the fall.
"The Webb data will help scientists understand the currently mysterious mechanism."
'Unique' planet
Uranus is unique because it rotates on its side at roughly a 90-degree angle from the plane of its orbit, NASA says.
This causes extreme seasons because the planet's poles experience many years of constant sunlight followed by an equal number of years of complete darkness.
Uranus takes 84 years to orbit the sun.
The new images of the planet come after NASA's James Webb Space Telescope captured Neptune's rings in infrared for the first time, allowing for seven of Neptune's 14 moons to be seen.
The new telescope was launched in December 2021 and experts hope to be able to look back to the beginning of time when stars and galaxies were formed.
It is the world's biggest and most powerful telescope and is floating about 930,000 miles above us.
-sky news