Year long days, wild winds, extremes of heat and cold.
Uranus can not be said to have a climate in the way Earth does, and even Earth dos not have just one climate.
This is not actually the case. All of the planets are tilted. Uranus just happens to be tilted more than any of the others. The Earth, for example is actually tilted 23.5 degrees from the vertical. Uranus is tilted 98 degrees from the vertical, making its north pole point towards the sun.
Both Earth and Uranus have a magnetic field, although Uranus' magnetic field is tilted at an extreme angle compared to Earth's. Additionally, both planets have an atmosphere composed mostly of hydrogen and helium, with Earth's atmosphere supporting life while Uranus' atmosphere is much colder and composed of different gases.
Answer this question… Uranus's axis of rotation is tilted at about 98 degrees from the perpendicular to its orbital plane. This means its axis is roughly in the plane of.
Earth has liquid water on its surface which supports life, while Uranus does not. Earth also has a solid surface and a diverse atmosphere, whereas Uranus is a gas giant with no solid surface. Additionally, Earth has a magnetic field while Uranus's magnetic field is peculiar and tilted.
Well first of all, since the planets are almost perfect spheres, they have no 'sides'.You're probably thinking of Uranus, whose axis of rotation is tilted of 97.77°, andso is approximately parallel with the plane of the Solar System.
Uranus can not be said to have a climate in the way Earth does, and even Earth dos not have just one climate.
earths axis is little tilted which makes its rotation different at different points of time. this change in rotation and the significant difference of distant between the earth and the sun affects the climate
All planets have tilted axes. But the axis of Uranus is tilted almost by 90 degrees with the plane of its orbit making it look like it is rotating vertically. See related link for a pictorial representation
No, planets are not bad because they are tilted. The Earth's tilt for example gives us the seasons. Uranus is tilted on its side; Venus is upside-down.
This is not actually the case. All of the planets are tilted. Uranus just happens to be tilted more than any of the others. The Earth, for example is actually tilted 23.5 degrees from the vertical. Uranus is tilted 98 degrees from the vertical, making its north pole point towards the sun.
Both Earth and Uranus have a magnetic field, although Uranus' magnetic field is tilted at an extreme angle compared to Earth's. Additionally, both planets have an atmosphere composed mostly of hydrogen and helium, with Earth's atmosphere supporting life while Uranus' atmosphere is much colder and composed of different gases.
The planet Uranus is about as different from Earth as two planets can be.
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune all have rings, and all have some kind of tilt to their axes. However, the one that's the most tilted is Uranus, which lies on its side in relation to the plane of its orbit around the Sun. It is said that something bumped into Uranus and the crash is so bad that Uranus tilted over along with it's rings. And now, it is still tilted.
No. It rotates in an axis that is about 23° tilted from perpendicular to the plane of the ecliptic. Uranus is the planet that is most tilted on its side, with an axial tilt of 97.77°.
If the Earth was tilted at 100 degrees (instead of 23), there would be drastically different variations of climate. It would be much warmer at high latitudes in the summer, and much cooler at low latitudes in the winter.
Because of the tilt of the earth, the sun hits different spots of the planet, at different times. When the northern hemisphere is tilted words the sun, the US will have summer, because the area is closer to the sun. The climate will change, get hotter, colder, dryer, wetter, etc, because of the season, and the season changes due to the tilt of the earth. Do you understang?