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The Planetary Society BlogBy Emily LakdawallaPlanetary Society Advent Calendar for December 22: VenusDec. 22, 2009 | 11:13 PST | 19:13 UTC
Venus is such a beautiful, brilliant light in the sky. (When it's up; just now Venus is actually near solar conjunction, so we'll have to wait a bit for it to grace the heavens.) It's often called Earth's twin, because its mass is so similar to our own planet's, and because it's our nearest planetary neighbor in the solar system. Getting spacecraft to Venus is pretty easy and takes a surprisingly short amount of time. But once a spacecraft gets there, it's faced with this. Thick clouds, so thick that they present an extreme challenge for scientific instruments to penetrate to study the surface.
Searching for an image of Venus as it might look to an astronaut is what led me to the community of amateur image processors over at unmannedspaceflight.com, so I am especially attached to this view. I wrote more about it here. For all of you who enjoy processing space images, Venus Express just released a whole big pile more of their pictures, including everything up through April 4 of this year, to the Planetary Science Archive, ESA's equivalent to NASA's Planetary Data System. Each day in December I'm posting a new global shot of a solar system body, processed by an amateur. Go to the blog homepage to open the most recent door in the planetary advent calendar!
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