Its swirling cloud layers are evocative of Jupiter, with different colors representing clouds at different altitudes–white is high-altitude, like cumulus clouds here on Earth, while the blue-green swirls represent cirrus-like layers. Winds howl at 560 MPH there, despite an utterly frigid -360°F atmosphere. The south pole is very reminiscent of Saturn, which also has a strange and giant hurricane at its southern end. And that scalloped band near the equator? Scientists don’t know what that is. The new images are an incredible feat because Uranus is so far away. It’s 30 times farther from the sun than we are, so it’s almost impossible to resolve with even the best telescopes. These images were shot with the Keck II telescope in Hawaii, which used powerful adaptive optics to cancel out turbulence from Earth’s atmosphere. The telescope team presented it Wednesday at an American Astronomical Society meeting. [via Berkeley Lab]