Scientists discover that Uran's planet smells like rotten egg

NASA has made public the recent discovery where it found that the planet reeks of rotten eggs. This is because gas clouds are enriched by sulfuric hydrogen, according to data collected by the Gemini telescope in Hawaii. A global team of researchers discovered evidence of sulfur hydrogen, one [...]
A global team of researchers discovered evidence of sulfur hydrogen, a bad gas that usually smells like rotten egg, in upper layers of Uran clouds.
“After decades of surveillance by NASA spacecraft Voyager 2, Uran was kept in a critical secret: making his clouds “, NASA said in press release Tuesday.
The mystery solution was finalised by studies published in the magazine “Nature Astronomy”.
The group of scientists, including physicist Glenn Orton of NASA's California laboratory, managed gas detection analyzed by the infrared light reflection from Uranus. Their studies were based on data collection from the giant Gemini telescope, reports “DW” Transmission Periscope.
“We have strongly suspected that hydrogen sulfucial gas influenced Uran's millimeter and radio spectrum for some time, but we were unable to credit the absorption needed to identify it more extensively,” said Orton. “Now, this part of the faucicon is gradually resolved. ”
Scientists also suspect that Uran's neighbour, the Neptune planet can contain sulfuric hydrogen.
Uranus is the seventh planet greater than the solar system about four times the earth.
The conditions for this planet to be populated by mankind are very small because it contains large quantities of sulfuric hydrogen. /Periscopi/












