Uranus and Neptune: Shape and Rotation
Ravit Helled, John D. Anderson, and Gerald Schubert

TL;DR
This study investigates the rotation periods and shapes of Uranus and Neptune using wind and shape data, suggesting they rotate faster or slower than Voyager measurements indicate, and exploring the possibility of differential rotation.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method to estimate the planets' rotation periods from shape and wind data, challenging previous Voyager-based assumptions.
Findings
Uranus may rotate faster than Voyager period
Neptune may rotate slower than Voyager period
Wind speeds are slower than previously thought
Abstract
Both Uranus and Neptune are thought to have strong zonal winds with velocities of several hundred meters per second. These wind velocities, however, assume solid-body rotation periods based on Voyager 2 measurements of periodic variations in the planets' radio signals and of fits to the planets' magnetic fields; 17.24h and 16.11h for Uranus and Neptune, respectively. The realization that the radio period of Saturn does not represent the planet's deep interior rotation and the complexity of the magnetic fields of Uranus and Neptune raise the possibility that the Voyager 2 radio and magnetic periods might not represent the deep interior rotation periods of the ice giants. Moreover, if there is deep differential rotation within Uranus and Neptune no single solid-body rotation period could characterize the bulk rotation of the planets. We use wind and shape data to investigate the rotation…
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