Abstract

Measurements made by the Voyager 2 spacecraft during its flybys of Uranus in 1986 found warm stratospheric and hot thermospheric temperatures that cannot be explained by solar energy alone. It contributes to what has become known as the “giant planet energy crisis”; there is a fundamental lack of understanding of the energy balance of giant planets in the solar system. Uranus, in particular, has both the hottest thermospheric temperatures and the weakest internal heat flux of all four giant planets. Moreover, the Voyager 2 UV temperature measurements are at odds with the many contemporaneous Earth-based stellar occultation observations. In this work, we examine the 1977 Uranus stellar occultation (U0) and compare the observed light curve to reported Voyager 2 temperature profiles by simulating the latter into stellar occultation light curves. In this investigation, we find that the observed light curves are in tension with the simulated light curves to a high degree of statistical confidence. Next, we reprocess the U0 light curves using a modern approach, with some significant adjustments described herein, and report updated profiles. We find that the lower thermosphere of Uranus is much cooler than the Voyager 2 profiles suggest but slightly warmer than those originally published from the U0 occultation. In Paper II, we will present the results of applying these methods to many of the dozens of archival Uranus stellar occultations.

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