Most recently, the orbiting US spacecraft Magellan
produced detailed maps of Venus' surface using
radar
Venus is the second planet from
the Sun and the sixth largest. It orbits 108,200,000 kilometers from
the Sun, has a diameter of 12,103.6 kilometers, and a mass of 4.869x10
to the 24th kilograms. Venus is the goddess of love and beauty.
The planet is so named probably because it is the brightest of the planets
known to the ancients. With a few exceptions, the surface features
on Venus are named for female figures. Venus has been known since
prehistoric times. It is the brightest object in the sky except for
the Sun and the Moon. Like Mercury, it was popularly thought to be
two separate bodies: Eosphorus as the morning star and Hesperus as the
evening star, but the Greek astronomers knew better. The first spacecraft
to visit Venus was Mariner 2 in 1962. It was subsequently visited
by many others (more than 20 in all so far), including Pioneer Venus and
the Soviet Venera 7 the first spacecraft to land on another planet, and
Venera 9 which returned the first photographs of the surface (below).
Venus' rotation is somewhat unusual
in that it is both very slow (243 Earth days per Venus day, slightly longer
than Venus' year) and retrograde
(rotation or orbital motion in a clockwise direction when viewed from above
the north pole of the primary). In addition, the periods of Venus'
rotation and of its orbit are synchronized such that it always presents
the same face toward Earth when the two planets are at their closest approach.
Whether this is a resonance effect or merely a coincidence is not known.
Venus is sometimes regarded as Earth's sister planet. In some ways they
are very similar:
-- Venus is only slightly smaller than Earth
(95% of Earth's diameter, 80% of Earth's mass).
-- Both have few craters indicating rellatively young surfaces.
-- Their densities and chemical composiitions are similar.
Because of these similarities,
it was thought that below its dense clouds Venus might be very Earthlike
and might even have life. But, unfortunately, more detailed study
of Venus reveals that in many important ways it is radically different
from Earth.
The
pressure of Venus' atmosphere at the surface is 90 atmospheres (about the
same as the pressure at a depth of 1 km in Earth's oceans). It is
composed mostly of carbon dioxide. There are several layers of clouds
many kilometers thick composed of sulfuric acid. These clouds completely
obscure our view of the surface. This dense atmosphere produces a
run-away greenhouse effect that raises Venus' surface temperature by about
400 degrees to over 740 K (hot enough to melt lead). Venus' surface
is actually hotter than Mercury's despite being nearly twice as far from
the Sun.
There
are strong (350 kph) winds at the cloud tops but winds at the surface are
very slow, no more than a few kilometers per hour. Venus probably
once had large amounts of water like Earth but it all boiled away.
Venus is now quite dry. Earth would have suffered the same fate had
it been just a little closer to the Sun. We may learn a lot about
Earth by learning why the basically similar Venus turned out so differently.
Most of Venus' surface consists of gently rolling plains with little relief.
There are also several broad depressions: Atalanta
Planitia, Guinevere
Planitia, Lavinia
Planitia. There two large highland areas:
Ishtar
Terra in the northern hemisphere (about the
size of Australia) and Aphrodite Terra
along the equator (about the size of South America). The interior
of Ishtar consists mainly of a high plateau, Lakshmi
Planum, which is surrounded by the highest
mountains on Venus including the enormous Maxwell
Montes.
Data
from Magellan's imaging radar shows that much of the surface of Venus is
covered by lava flows. There are several large shield volcanoes (similar
to Hawaii or Olympus Mons) such as Sif Mons (above). Recently announced
findings indicate that Venus is still volcanically active, but only in
a few hot spots; for the most part it has been geologically rather quiet
for the past few hundred million years. There are no small craters
on Venus. It seems that small meteoroids burn up in Venus' dense
atmosphere before reaching the surface. Craters on Venus seem to
come in bunches indicating that large meteoriods that do reach the surface
usually break up in the atmosphere. The oldest terrains on Venus
seem to be about 800 million years old. Extensive volcanism at that
time wiped out the earlier surface including any large craters from early
in Venus' history. The interior of Venus is probably very similar
to that of Earth: an iron core about 3000 km in radius, a molten rocky
mantle comprising the majority of the planet. Recent results from
the Magellan gravity data indicate that Venus' crust is stronger and thicker
than had previously been assumed. Like Earth, convection in the mantle
produces stress on the surface which is relieved in many relatively small
regions instead of being concentrated at plate boundaries as is the case
on Earth. Venus is usually visible with the naked eye. Sometimes
(inaccurately) refered to as the "morning star" or the "evening star",
it is by far the brightest "star" in the sky.