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Venus

  • MVN050
  • June 7, 2025 at 10:00 PM
  • June 7, 2025 at 10:09 PM
  • 338 times viewed
  • entry
  • History and Exploration
  • Scientific Importance
  • Venus is the second planet from the Sun and the third brightest natural object in Earth’s sky after the Sun and Moon. Often referred to as Earth’s twin due to its similar size and composition, Venus differs drastically in surface conditions, featuring extreme temperatures, crushing atmospheric pressure, and a dense carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere. It is a terrestrial planet and one of the most studied objects in the Solar System.

    1 Venus

    Venus is the second planet from the Sun and the third brightest natural object in Earth’s sky after the Sun and Moon. Often referred to as Earth’s twin due to its similar size and composition, Venus differs drastically in surface conditions, featuring extreme temperatures, crushing atmospheric pressure, and a dense carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere. It is a terrestrial planet and one of the most studied objects in the Solar System.

    1.1 General Properties

    PropertyValue
    Average Diameter~12,104 km
    Distance from the Sun~108.2 million km (0.72 AU)
    Orbital Period~225 Earth days
    Rotation Period~243 Earth days (retrograde)
    MoonsNone
    Surface Gravity~8.87 m/s² (about 90% of Earth’s)
    AtmosphereVery dense, CO₂-dominated
    Surface Temperature~465 °C (hottest planet in the Solar System)


    1.2 Physical Characteristics

    Venus has a rocky surface covered with volcanic plains, impact craters, and large highland regions. Its landscape features include:

    • Maxwell Montes – the tallest mountain on Venus, ~11 km high
    • Ishtar Terra and Aphrodite Terra – major highland plateaus
    • Pancake domes – unique, flattened volcanic structures
    • Tesserae – heavily deformed regions indicating ancient crustal activity

    Venus has no liquid water on its surface and shows evidence of massive volcanic resurfacing events in its past.

    1.3 Atmosphere and Climate

    The atmosphere of Venus is incredibly thick and toxic, composed mostly of:

    • CO₂ (~96.5%)
    • Nitrogen (~3.5%)
    • Traces of sulfur dioxide, water vapor, and other gases

    Cloud layers, composed primarily of sulfuric acid droplets, permanently obscure the surface from visible observation. The atmosphere causes a runaway greenhouse effect, trapping heat and making Venus hotter than Mercury despite being farther from the Sun.

    Surface pressure is about 92 times greater than Earth’s, equivalent to the pressure found 900 meters underwater.

    • venus

Early Observations

Venus has been known since ancient times and was often associated with gods of love and beauty (e.g., Venus in Roman mythology, Aphrodite in Greek). It appears both as the “morning star” and “evening star” due to its inner orbit and is visible to the naked eye.

Space Exploration

Venus was the first planet visited by a spacecraft:

  • 1962: Mariner 2 (NASA) – first successful flyby of Venus
  • 1970: Venera 7 (USSR) – first spacecraft to land on another planet and transmit data
  • 1978: Pioneer Venus – included orbiter and atmospheric probes
  • 1983–1985: Venera 15 & 16 – radar mapping of the surface
  • 1990–1994: Magellan (NASA) – mapped 98% of Venus’ surface using radar

More recently:

  • Venus Express (ESA, 2005–2014) studied atmospheric dynamics
  • Akatsuki (JAXA, ongoing) studies weather and cloud motion
  • Parker Solar Probe and Solar Orbiter have conducted Venus flybys for gravity assists and incidental measurements

Upcoming missions include VERITAS and DAVINCI (NASA), and EnVision (ESA), aiming to better understand Venus' geology, atmosphere, and potential for past habitability.

Despite its hostile surface, Venus is crucial for comparative planetology. Studying Venus helps scientists:

  • Understand the greenhouse effect and atmospheric evolution
  • Explore why two similar planets (Venus and Earth) developed so differently
  • Investigate the potential for past oceans and habitability

Recent observations, including the debated detection of phosphine in the atmosphere, have renewed interest in the possibility of microbial life in Venus’ upper cloud layers, where temperatures and pressures are more Earth-like.

Venus in Culture

Venus has fascinated cultures for millennia. Often depicted as a symbol of femininity and beauty, it features in mythology, astrology, literature, and art. In modern times, Venus continues to inspire exploration, particularly as a case study for climate science and planetary evolution.

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Table of Contents

  • 1 Venus
    • 1.1 General Properties
    • 1.2 Physical Characteristics
    • 1.3 Atmosphere and Climate

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