New research explains Voyager 2's extreme radiation findings at Uranus

Scientists have proposed a solution to a long-standing puzzle from NASA's Voyager 2 mission to Uranus in 1986. The spacecraft detected unexpectedly high radiation levels, which new analysis attributes to a rare solar wind event. This discovery highlights similarities in space weather between Uranus and Earth.

In 1986, NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft conducted a flyby of Uranus, revealing an electron radiation belt with energy levels far exceeding predictions. Researchers had been puzzled by this anomaly for nearly four decades, as Uranus's unique characteristics—such as its extreme axial tilt and weak magnetic field—made it seem unlikely to sustain such intense radiation.

A recent study by scientists at the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) offers a compelling explanation. Led by Dr. Robert Allen, the team suggests that Voyager 2 arrived during a rare space weather event involving a co-rotating interaction region in the solar wind. This structure likely flooded Uranus's magnetosphere with additional energy, supercharging the radiation belts.

"Science has come a long way since the Voyager 2 flyby," Dr. Allen said. "We decided to take a comparative approach looking at the Voyager 2 data and compare it to Earth observations we've made in the decades since."

The mission recorded the strongest high-frequency waves encountered throughout its journey, initially thought to dissipate electrons into the atmosphere. However, subsequent research on Earth's radiation belts shows these waves can instead accelerate particles under certain conditions. A similar event in 2019 near Earth caused significant electron acceleration, supporting the Uranus hypothesis.

"If a similar mechanism interacted with the Uranian system, it would explain why Voyager 2 saw all this unexpected additional energy," noted co-author Dr. Sarah Vines.

This finding not only resolves the 1986 mystery but also underscores Uranus's dynamic environment, akin to Earth's. It bolsters calls for a dedicated mission to Uranus, with potential insights for Neptune. The research appears in Geophysical Research Letters (2025, volume 52, issue 22).

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