Venus, the second planet from the sun, is the hottest and brightest planet in the solar system.
The scorching planet is named after the Roman goddess of love and beauty and is the only solar system planet named after a female when following the International Astronomical Union designation of names that the astronomy community uses as a convention. (Other cultures have different names for celestial locations.)
Venus may have been named after the most beautiful deity of the Roman (and Greek) pantheons because it shone the brightest among the five planets known to ancient astronomers. In ancient Greek city-states, however, Venus was called Aphrodite.
In ancient times, Venus was often thought to be two different stars, the evening star and the morning star — that is, the ones that first appeared at sunset and sunrise. In Christian Latin, they were respectively known as Vesper and Lucifer. (In Christian times, Lucifer, or "light-bringer," became known as the name of Satan before his fall.)
However, further observations of Venus in the space age show a very hellish environment. This makes Venus a very difficult planet to observe from up close because spacecraft do not survive long on its surface.
The "real" color of Venus, however, is impossible to see from orbit due to the sulfuric acid clouds surrounding the planet. Pictures of Venus are thus only visible if an orbiting satellite has the ability to peer through the thick clouds. For a human explorer to see the surface, they would need to descend and to survive the oven-like temperatures and high pressures present down there. That harsh environment likely means that for now, we'll be using robotic explorers to look at Venus for us.
Venus facts
Venus and Earth are often called twins because they are similar in size, mass, density, composition and gravity. Venus is only a little bit smaller than our home planet, with a mass of about 80% of Earth's.
Venus is not a gas planet, but a rocky planet. The interior of Venus is made of a metallic iron core that's roughly 2,400 miles (6,000 km) wide. Venus' molten rocky mantle is roughly 1,200 miles (3,000 km) thick. Venus' crust is mostly basalt and is estimated to be 6 to 12 miles (10 to 20 km) thick, on average.
Why Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system is rather complicated. Although Venus is not the planet closest to the sun, its dense atmosphere traps heat in a runaway version of the greenhouse effect that we see firsthand on Earth with global warming. As a result, temperatures on Venus reach 880 degrees Fahrenheit (471 degrees Celsius), which is more than hot enough to melt lead. Spacecraft have survived only a few hours after landing on the planet before being destroyed.
Venus' surface is extremely dry. During the planet's evolution, ultraviolet rays from the sun evaporated water quickly, keeping Venus in a prolonged molten state. There is no liquid water on its surface today because the scorching heat created by its ozone-filled atmosphere would cause water to immediately boil away.
Venus Climate
The very top layer of Venus' clouds zips around the planet every four Earth days, propelled by hurricane-force winds traveling roughly 224 mph (360 kph). This superrotation of the planet's atmosphere, some 60 times faster than Venus itself rotates, might be one of Venus' biggest mysteries.
The clouds also carry signs of meteorological events known as gravity waves, caused when winds blow over geological features, causing rises and falls in the layers of air. The winds at the planet's surface are much slower, estimated to be just a few miles per hour.
Unusual stripes in the upper clouds of Venus are dubbed "blue absorbers" or "ultraviolet absorbers" because they strongly absorb light in the blue and ultraviolet wavelengths. These are soaking up a huge amount of energy — nearly half of the total solar energy the planet absorbs. As such, they seem to play a major role in keeping Venus as hellish as it is. Their exact composition remains uncertain; Some scientists suggest it could even be life, although many things would need to be ruled out before that conclusion is accepted.
Venus Exploration
The Soviet Union's Venera 7 was the first spacecraft to land on another planet, having landed on Venus in December 1970. Venera 9 returned the first photographs of the Venusian surface. The first Venusian orbiter, NASA's Magellan, generated maps of 98% of the planet's surface, showing features as small as 330 feet (100 meters) across.
The European Space Agency's Venus Express spent eight years in orbit around Venus with a large variety of instruments and confirmed the presence of lightning there. In August 2014, as the satellite began wrapping up its mission, controllers engaged in a month-long maneuver that plunged the spacecraft into the outer layers of the planet's atmosphere.
As of at least late 2019, NASA and the Russian Academy of Sciences' Space Research Institute have discussed collaborating on the Venera-D mission, which would include an orbiter, a lander and perhaps a solar-powered airship. (100% not happening anymore)
Life on Venus
A breakthrough scientific discovery in 2020 suddenly had scientists discussing whether or not it was possible that life could somehow exist in the present-day hellish atmospheres of Venus.
Now, scientists think that it is most likely that, billions of years ago, Venus could have been habitable and fairly similar to current-day Earth. But since then, it has undergone a drastic greenhouse effect that has resulted in Venus' current iteration with scorching surface temperatures and an atmosphere that many describe as "hellish."
However, in 2020, scientists revealed the discovery of a strange chemical in the planet's clouds that some think could be a sign of life: phosphine.
Well, while phosphine exists in strange ways such as rat poison, it has also been spotted alongside groups of certain microorganisms and some scientists think that, on Earth, the compound is produced by microbes as they decay chemically.
This has caused some to suspect that, if microbes could create phosphine, then perhaps microbes might be responsible for the phosphine in Venus' atmosphere. Since the discovery, there have been follow-up analyses that have made some doubt whether or not the compound is created by microbes, but scientists are continuing to investigate, especially with new missions planned for the planet.
Terraforming Venus
Terraforming any planet is sure to bring up ethical questions about how to protect any life that might be there, along with how to preserve any information that life left behind.
Assuming we do want to go ahead with terraforming Venus, working on this would require an ocean and some sort of weathering process, a proposal from 2020 suggests. With enough water (assuming we could access tremendous amounts of the stuff) it might be possible to remove dust from the air and to get the atmospheric carbon dioxide to condense onto the surface. One possible way of making this happen could be to throw immense numbers of icy objects, like comets, into the atmosphere of Venus; how to get that to happen is another question, of course.
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So within the past week there have been revelations from fairly mainstream sources that
- :amerikkka: blew up the Nordstream pipeline and
- NATO prevented a ceasefire between :russia-cool: and :ukkkraine:
I think revelations may be a strong word, given that... you know... we knew. But yes. Hersch's piece is interesting but it's not proof and I think the reality on the ground is such that it's unlikely it will have much impact in the short term. I don't think anyone who matters wasn't already aware that NATO had been sabotaging any possibility of a negotiated peace between Russia and Ukraine since 2014 at least.
What's the deal with straight sex?
How do you know who's the guy, and who's the other guy??
Brandon starts talking about queer issues
Camera cuts to :pete-eat: and :death-to-the-poor:
:agony-minion:
Why do suburban white woman like True Crime so much? I know they claim it's because it teaches them safety or whatever but most of the women saying this live in cushy suburban homes where the biggest threat is some drunk dad passing out on their front yard.
Probably boredom, they live safe comfortable lives in suburbia and they want some excitement so they seek it out in media. How the dudes rock version is enrolling in those mock navy seal bootcamps.
I think the “danger” section of the brain needs stimulation. A stereotypically masculine person might get their kicks from watching violent sports or the History Chanel, all while being thankful that he’s not the one getting a concussion or, well, war crimed. I think true crime for “comfortable” women is a similar dynamic.
I think a lot of women have had experiences that made them wonder if they were about to get murdered. I'm not saying it's the best coping mechanism (and there's a lot to unpack there involving things like race and class), but true crime is kind of like bonding over scary experiences I guess?
The heaviest I've ever been in my life was 250 pounds 3 months into the pandemic. Until the last few months I've been hovering between 230 and 240. I kinda accidentally hit a half-decade low of 220 today. I've become too poor to buy snack food lol. So I guess I'm making a run at my goal weight. 30 down, 40 to go :niko-concern:
Well done!
I'm on the opposite end, first time in my life I weighed over 150lbs/68kg at 6'1/185cm was this month. I'm still skin and bones, but making lists of progress. Wish you well in your weight loss journey!
biden pretending hes not the president again :congratulations: and talking game that he's never ever did in his god damn life
Yes.
Though usually I am present enough to just erase it before hitting post
what's with this state of the union "waiting on republican response", like what, who the fuck cares?? this whole damn country is structured like a reality show.
did obamna get a "republican response"? Am I misremembering? Is this just nonsense dramabait for the circus?
Yeah he did. The opposing party always has like an official response. I think during some round of infighting in the GOP Obama got both an official and an unofficial response from some tea party guy.
It definitely is dramabait circus as well tho
How to lower own standards for music so as to be able to tolerate my own music
it's ridiculous how people are just rolling with the idea that China would send a big Around the World in 80 Days balloon to spy on the US. do they think Xi is sitting in his office twirling a fake Dick Dastardly mustache or some shit?
do not reply with some pedantic shit about how the original novel did not put those dinks in a balloon. i know
China unveils new plan to tie Brandon to train tracks, contingencies include a bundle of dynamite with a faulty plunger and a tunnel painted onto a wall
Ooh I hope they try one of those round bombs with the fuse sticking out
i heard they were selling those to Ukraine through the Acme Corporation
I don't know what they think. The balloon thing was really dumb even by America standards. The chemical weapons train happened but somehow the news spent days on a lost weather balloon?
and that was such a ridiculous thing to skip over. i think i saw that they created a temporary exclusion zone around that controlled burn but we're gonna worry about balloon boy 2
The wild thing is that trains explode and take out entire towns like that every 1-3 years in the US, and it should be a huge story given how the Dems just slit the throat of the rail unions while the rail companies are doing vast stock buybacks.
I'm convinced most americans never learned about global wind currents
most americans never learned to read past a 6th grade level, i think you're right on the money there
:ohnoes: communists trying to remember how to spell bourgwasy
:ohnoes: anarchists trying to remember how to spell higherarchy
Communist and Anarchit debate who's worse at spelling and they resolve it by making out
Still laugh when people call Abe's assassin's gun a "doohickey" or a "gizmo" or whatever.