Venus

written by: Levente Draghici; article published: year 2006, month 08;



In: Categories » Education and reference » The Universe » Venus

Venus, the jewel of the sky, was once know by ancient astronomers as the morning star and evening star. Early astronomers once thought Venus to be two separate bodies. Venus, which is named after the Roman goddess of love and beauty, is veiled by thick swirling cloud cover.

Astronomers refer to Venus as Earth's sister planet. Both are similar in size, mass, density and volume. Both formed about the same time and condensed out of the same nebula. However, during the last few years scientists have found that the kinship ends here. Venus is very different from the Earth. It has no oceans and is surrounded by a heavy atmosphere composed mainly of carbon dioxide with virtually no water vapour. Its clouds are composed of sulphuric acid droplets. At the surface, the atmospheric pressure is 92 times that of the Earth's at sea-level.

Venus is scorched with a surface temperature of about 482° C (900° F). This high temperature is primarily due to a runaway greenhouse effect caused by the heavy atmosphere of carbon dioxide. Sunlight passes through the atmosphere to heat the surface of the planet. Heat is radiated out, but is trapped by the dense atmosphere and not allowed to escape into space. This makes Venus hotter than Mercury.

A Venusian day is 243 Earth days and is longer than its year of 225 days. Oddly, Venus rotates from east to west. To an observer on Venus, the Sun would rise in the west and set in the east. Until just recently, Venus' dense cloud cover has prevented scientists from uncovering the geological nature of the surface. Developments in radar telescopes and radar imaging systems orbiting the planet have made it possible to see through the cloud deck to the surface below. Four of the most successful missions in revealing the Venusian surface are NASA's Pioneer Venus mission (1978), the Soviet Union's Venera 15 and 16 missions (1983-1984), and NASA's Magellan radar mapping mission (1990-1994). As these spacecraft began mapping the planet a new picture of Venus emerged.

Venus' surface is relatively young geologically speaking. It appears to have been completely resurfaced 300 to 500 million years ago. Scientists debate how and why this occurred. The Venusian topography consists of vast plains covered by lava flows and mountain or highland regions deformed by geological activity. Maxwell Montes in Ishtar Terra is the highest peak on Venus. The Aphrodite Terra highlands extend almost half way around the equator. Magellan images of highland regions above 2.5 kilometres (1.5 miles) are unusually bright, characteristic of moist soil. However, liquid water does not exist on the surface and cannot account for the bright highlands. One theory suggests that the bright material might be composed of metallic compounds. Studies have shown the material might be iron pyrite (also know as "fools gold"). It is unstable on the plains but would be stable in the highlands. The material could also be some type of exotic material which would give the same results but at lower concentrations.

Venus is scarred by numerous impact craters distributed randomly over its surface. Small craters less that 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) are almost non-existent due to the heavy Venusian atmosphere. The exception occurs when large meteorites shatter just before impact, creating crater clusters. Volcanoes and volcanic features are even more numerous. At least 85% of the Venusian surface is covered with volcanic rock.

Hugh lava flows, extending for hundreds of kilometres, have flooded the lowlands creating vast plains. More than 100,000 small shield volcanoes dot the surface along with hundreds of large volcanoes. Flows from volcanoes have produced long sinuous channels extending for hundreds of kilometres, with one extending nearly 7,000 kilometres (4,300 miles).

Giant calderas more than 100 kilometres (62 miles) in diameter are found on Venus. Terrestrial calderas are usually only several kilometres in diameter. Several features unique to Venus include coronae and arachnoids. Coronae are large circular to oval features, encircled with cliffs and are hundreds of kilometres across. They are thought to be the surface expression of mantle upwelling. Archnoids are circular to elongated features similar to coronae. They may have been caused by molten rock seeping into surface fractures and producing systems of radiating dikes and fractures.

Venus Statistics:

Time taken to orbit the Sun in Earth years: 0.62
Average orbital velocity in miles/second (km/sec): 21.7 (35.0)
Angle between orbit of planet and orbit of Earth: 3.39º
Time taken to rotate on axis in Earth time: 243 days
Tilt of axis to perpendicular of orbital plane: 178º
Average distance from Sun in astronomical units*: 0.72
Average distance from Sun in miles (km): 67 million (108 million)
Average surface temperature in degrees Celsius: +475º
Density relative to water: 5.3
Equatorial diameter relative to Earth diameter**: 0.95
Equatorial diameter in miles (km): 7500 (12,100)
Mass relative to Earth: 0.82
Escape velocity in miles/second (km/sec): 6.43 (10.36)
Number of known moons: 0
Number of known rings: 0
Date of discovery: Venus is visible with the naked eye


* One astronomical unit is 92,956,000 miles (149,598,000km)
** Earth's diameter is 7,926 miles (12,756km)

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