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Artist's concept of how Uranus and its tiny moon Puck.

WMY100118S | © Walter Myers / Stocktrek Images, Inc.

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Photo of Artist's concept of how Uranus and its tiny moon Puck.

Description:
Artist's concept of how Uranus and its tiny satellite Puck might look from a position in space about a thousand miles above and beyond Puck itself. With a diameter of about 100 miles, Puck is the largest and outermost of the ten known inner satellites that orbit Uranus within a radius of 51 thousand miles. Further in toward Uranus on the right is Belinda, a moon that is about 40 miles in diameter. Even closer to Uranus on the far left is the 60-mile-diameter satellite Portia. On Uranus itself can be seen a giant, cyclonic storm that's nearly as big as the Earth. During the past few years the Hubble Space Telescope has observed storms in Uranus' southern hemisphere, but the structure and an nature of these storms is unknown.