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Could we set Uranus on fire to steal its hidden diamonds?

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Could we set Uranus on fire to steal its hidden diamonds?

Dead Planets Society is a podcast that takes outlandish ideas about how to tinker with the cosmos – from snapping the moon in half to causing a gravitational wave apocalypse – and subjects them to the laws of physics to see how they fare. Listen on AppleSpotify or on our podcast page.

Uranus and Neptune are remarkably alike, so we don’t need both of them. That’s the reasoning behind this episode of Dead Planets Society, in which our hosts Chelsea Whyte and Leah Crane have decided to light Uranus on fire.

Of course, there is a scientific rationale for this – for one, burning a material and examining its light through a method called spectroscopy is one of the best ways to determine its chemical composition. For another, the deep interiors of the ice giant planets remain murky and mysterious, so burning away the outer layers could reveal what is beneath.

Before we reach for some matches, this episode’s special guest, planetary scientist Paul Byrne at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, says this might be tricky. As he explains, the outer layers of Uranus are lacking in oxygen, which is required for combustion. It might not even help to pump in more oxygen than is contained in the entire solar system.

But the interior of Uranus isn’t just mysterious; it also may be full of iceberg-like chunks of diamond. That quickly shifts our hosts’ focus. This is no longer a mission of pyrotechnics – it’s a heist.

We still need to get rid of the planet’s outer layers, and the most efficient way to do that is probably by slamming another world into it. From Earth, this would look like a flash of light, a cloud of glowing vapour and potentially a bright tail forming behind Uranus. The impact would have to be carefully planned to avoid smashing the planet and its diamonds to bits.

With the right collision, though, we could accomplish both the new goal of getting at Uranus’s diamonds and the original goal of exposing its deeper layers so they can be studied. We could also ruin the entire solar system, but when has that been a concern in the Dead Planets Society?

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