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Near-infrared adaptive optics imaging of Uranus by the Keck 2 telescope during 2003 and 2004 has revealed numerous discrete cloud features, 70 of which were used to extend the zonal wind profile of Uranus up to 60deg N. We confirmed the presence of a north-south asymmetry in the circulation (Karkoschka, Science 111, 570-572, 1998), and improved its characterization. We found no clear indication of long term change in wind speed between 1986 and 2004, although results of Hammel et al. (2001, Icarus 153, 229-235) based on 2001 HST and Keck observations average ~10 m/s less westward than earlier and later results, and 2003 observations by Hammel et al. (2005, Icarus 175, 534-545) show increased wind speeds near 45deg N, which we dont see in our 2003-2004 observations. We observed a wide range of lifetimes for discrete cloud features: some features evolve within ~1 hour, many have persisted at least one month, and one feature near 34deg S (termed S34) seems to have persisted for nearly two decades, a conclusion derived with the help of Voyager 2 and HST observations. S34 oscillates in latitude between 32deg S and 36.5deg S, with a period of $sim$1000 days, which may be a result of a non-barotropic Rossby wave. It also varied its longitudinal drift rate between -20deg /day and -31deg /day in approximate accord with the latitudinal gradient in the zonal wind profile, exhibiting behavior similar to that of the DS2 feature observed on Neptune (Sromovsky et al., Icarus 105, 110-141, 1993). S34 also exhibits a superimposed rapid oscillation with an amplitude of 0.57deg in latitude and period of 0.7 days, which is approximately consistent with an inertial oscillation.
We aim to locate the stability region for Uranus Trojans (UT hereafter) and find out the dynamical mechanisms responsible for the structures in the phase space. Using the spectral number as the stability indicator, we construct the dynamical maps on
Uranus provides a unique laboratory to test our understanding of planetary atmospheres under extreme conditions. Multi-spectral observations from Voyager, ground-based observatories, and space telescopes have revealed a delicately banded atmosphere p
The $mu$ and $ u$ rings of Uranus form a secondary ring-moon system with the satellites Puck, Mab,Portia, and Rosalind. These rings are tenuous and dominated by micrometric particles, which can be strongly disturbed by the solar radiation pressure. W
The core accretion theory of planet formation has at least two fundamental problems explaining the origins of Uranus and Neptune: (1) dynamical times in the trans-Saturnian solar nebula are so long that core growth can take > 15 Myr, and (2) the onse
We present optical (g, R_c, and I_c) to near-infrared (J) simultaneous photometric observations for a primary transit of GJ3470b, a Uranus-mass transiting planet around a nearby M dwarf, by using the 50-cm MITSuME telescope and the 188-cm telescope,