Space Topics: Venus
Facts and Pictures
Venus
A true color view of Venus from the Mariner 10 spacecraft, captured
as it sped toward Mercury. Venus's surface is invisible under a thick
layer of sulfuric acid clouds. Credit: NASA/JPL/Ricardo Nunes |
Venus is Earth’s nearest neighbor in the solar system, and it is also
the planet nearest to Earth in size and composition. But telescopic
observers of Venus attempting to see the planet’s surface are frustrated
by a thick, cloud-filled atmosphere, which permanently hides Venus’ surface
from view. The light-reflecting clouds in Venus’ atmosphere, combined
with its proximity to both Earth and the Sun, are responsible for its brilliant
appearance in the evening and morning sky. Venus is the second brightest
object in the night sky, after the Moon.
Venus’ atmosphere
Among the terrestrial bodies with atmospheres -- Venus, Earth, Mars, and
Titan -- Venus’ is by far the densest. At the surface, the pressure
of the atmosphere is 90 times the pressure at Earth’s surface -- or
the same as the pressure at a depth of 1 kilometer (3,000 feet) in the
ocean.
The crushing atmosphere contains 96% carbon dioxide, and 4% nitrogen. Scientists
believe that Earth and Venus started out with very similar primordial atmospheres,
but the situation now is wildly different:
| |
Primordial Atmosphere |
Present Atmosphere |
| Earth |
Venus |
Earth |
Venus |
| Carbon dioxide (CO2) |
60 bars |
90 bars |
0.0003 bars |
90 bars |
| Water (H2O) |
300 bars |
450 bars |
0.26 bars |
0.002 bars |
| Nitrogen (N2) |
2 bars |
3 bars |
0.8 bars |
3 bars |
Data is from The New Solar System, Beatty and
Chaikin, ed. |
Venus' upper atmospheric clouds
A Galileo view of Venus through a violet filter reveals U-shaped
patterns in Venus' upper atmospheric clouds. Credit: NASA/JPL/University
of Arizona/NOAO |
Venus' middle cloud layers in infrared
A view of Venus' night side in near infrared show the turbulent,
cloudy middle atmosphere at an elevation of about 50-55 kilometers
(30- 33 miles) above the surface, 10-16 kilometers or 6-10 miles
below the visible cloud tops. Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona |
Scientists believe that a history of widespread, active volcanism on Venus
and a runaway greenhouse effect have kept nearly all of its volatile elements
up in the air -- and caused most of its hydrogen (and thus water vapor) to
be lost to space.
Because there is more gas on Venus than Earth, Venus’ atmosphere is
taller than Earth’s. Earth’s highest visible clouds are
about 12 kilometers (7.5 miles) above the ground, while Venus’ clouds
-- composed of sulfuric acid -- accumulate in opaque layers between 50 and
80 kilometers (30 and 50 miles) above the ground. The high elevation
of Venus’ atmosphere means that the atmosphere doesn’t “feel” the
topography of the surface underneath it nearly to the extent that Earth’s
atmosphere does. That’s one reason for the relatively simple global
atmospheric circulation patterns that have been observed in Venus’ clouds.
Because of Venus’ very slow rotation rate and thick atmosphere, its
atmospheric circulation patterns should be dominated by a pattern called Hadley
circulation. With the Sun parked over one hemisphere, it creates a hot
area on the day side near the equator. That hot air rises, inducing
a circulation pattern where high altitude air flows toward the poles, sinks
at the pole, and flows along the surface toward the equator. Hadley
circulation does happen at Venus, but observers have also discovered that
Venus’ atmosphere has a latitude-parallel component as well. In
fact, Venus atmosphere super-rotates, meaning that it moves in the same direction
as the planet rotates (from right to left in global views). Super-rotating
winds in Venus’ atmosphere can reach speeds of 100 meters per second
(220 miles per hour) at the cloud tops. Why the atmosphere rotates so
fast is another Venus mystery.
The “greenhouse effect”
Venus is hotter than it should be. At its distance from the Sun, it
receives an amount of solar insolation enough to maintain its surface temperature
at about the boiling point of water (373 Kelvin, 100 Celsius, 212 Fahrenheit). But
radio measurements from the Earth proved that Venus has the hottest solid
surface in the solar system, at a constant 750 Kelvin (480 Celsius, 900 Fahrenheit),
day and night. That temperature is hot enough to melt lead, and to give
Venus’ rocks a warm glow.
Where did all the heat come from? The carbon dioxide in Venus’ atmosphere
is partially transparent to relatively short-wavelength, visible and near-infrared
radiation coming from the Sun. That radiation is absorbed by rocks,
which then re-emit the radiation at a longer wavelength (called “thermal” or “mid-infrared”). Carbon
dioxide is much less transparent to the thermal radiation, so much of the
radiation is bounced back to the planet or absorbed and re-radiated, in part
back to the surface, keeping its energy inside the blanket of Venus’ atmosphere. This
process is called the “greenhouse effect” even though it’s
not why greenhouses keep warm.
If Venus ever had any oceans, the greenhouse effect heated them so much that
the oceans would have boiled and evaporated long ago. Liquid water is
a necessary ingredient in chemical reactions on Earth that trap volatile carbon
and sulfur compounds and sequester them in rocks. Without water on Venus,
these volatile gases hang out in Venus’ atmosphere, contributing to
a runaway greenhouse, where more heat meant more atmosphere, which trapped
more heat, and so on.
Venus’ surface
With its opaque atmosphere, Venus’ surface could not be observed until
radio astronomy came of age in the 1960s and 1970s. Now, though, Earth-based
radio telescopes and orbiting spacecraft, particularly Magellan, have produced
global maps of the surface, and there are a few precious photos from four
Venera landers.
Venus does not look like Earth. On Earth, the patterns of continents,
ocean floors, and chains of mountains and volcanoes are dominated by a process
known as “plate tectonics,” in which pieces of the Earth’s
crust move independently, colliding and pulling apart, creating geologic activity
mostly on plate edges. Venus shows no evidence of plate tectonics. It
does not have Earth-like ocean basins and continents. It does have high
areas and low areas, but most of its elevation is in the middle. There
are plenty of tectonic features -- chains and belts of ridges and deformed
plateaus called “tesserae” -- but they don’t seem to tell
a systematic story like the Earth’s plate boundaries do. The nature
and origin of the tesserae and other tectonic features on Venus are an area
of hot debate.
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Parts of Venus, like Ovda Regio, are covered with landforms that result
from a long and complex history of folding, faulting, and volcanic
infilling. These terrains are called "ridge belts" or "tesserae" depending
upon the complexity of the tectonic features that they display. Credit:
NASA/JPL |
Venus shows plenty of evidence for volcanism everywhere across its surface. Some
volcanoes are very large, while some are very small. Small volcanoes
can cluster in the hundreds into “shield fields,” which have no
equivalent on Earth. (Volcanoes on Earth form roughly linear patterns.) All
over Venus, locally low topography appears to be filled with layer upon layer
of broad lava flows. While some are small, many lava flows appear to
have spread for hundreds or even thousands of kilometers across the surface
before solidifying. Even with Venus’ high surface temperature
and pressure, it is a great mystery how lava could remain so fluid for enough
time to flow such a long distance on the surface.
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Among Venus' many different kinds of volcanic features are steep-sided domes
like these in Alpha Regio. The seven domes in this image are about 25 kilometers
in diameter, with heights of up to about 750 meters. They probably formed
when viscous lava erupted from a central vent onto a flat lava plain. The
exterior cooled before the eruption ended; the cooled surface cracked as
it stretched from the lava that continued to flow within the structure. Credit:
NASA/JPL
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The bright splashes in this image are lava flows spreading from the large volcano
Sif Mons. They are bright because their surfaces are blocky. Some of the
flows have spilled into north-south trending fractures that existed on the
plains prior to the eruption. Credit: NASA/JPL
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Images from the Venera landers show that the plains appear to be filled with
platy, basaltic volcanic rock, like a recent flow on the flank of a Hawai’ian
volcano.
The Venera 13 lander, landed on
Venus on March 3, 1982. It returned both grayscale and color images of the
surface, revealing flat, platy, volcanic rocks. Brown University/Vernadsky
Institute/O. de Goursac
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Craters on Venus
The 30-kilometer-diameter crater Adivar is surrounded a bright "splat" of
blocky material forming the crater's ejecta blanket. Beyond that, a light-colored
parabola of windblown deposits frames the crater. Most parabolas around Venus
craters are dark; this is an exception.
Credit: NASA/JPL
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Venus has approximately 900 impact craters. The thick atmosphere acts
to protect Venus from smaller asteroids, but any sufficiently large asteroid
can get through. Over its history, Venus should have been completely
covered with large impact craters, like the Moon or Mercury. The relatively
low number of craters means that the geologic record of older craters has
been destroyed, as is true on Earth. So Venus, like Earth, has been
geologically active relatively recently in the past.
The number of craters yields an estimate of an average age of the surface
of Venus of 500 million years or so. However, this could mean either
that the whole surface of Venus convulsed and was replaced in a global volcanic
cataclysm 500 million years ago, or that, like Earth, it experiences a more
gradual and continuous style of resurfacing, with some parts being geologically
active but most parts dormant at any one time, averaging out to a whole-surface
replacement rate of 500 million years. No one has ever proved the existence
of active volcanism in the present on Venus; whether it’s active or
not is a mystery.
Radar images of Venus’ craters are particularly beautiful. When
an asteroid strikes Venus and tosses material into the air, the thick atmosphere
traps most of the crater ejecta close to the crater. It makes a splashy
looking bright-colored blanket (as seen in radar images). When the asteroid
comes in at a shallow angle, the resulting ejecta blanket often has a symmetrical
butterfly-shaped form. But some of the finer ejecta material seems to
be tossed high into Venus’ atmosphere, where the prevailing winds can
carry it long distances. As the fine ejecta settles out, it can form
a dark parabola-shaped deposit, opening in the direction of the prevailing
winds, with the crater at its focus.
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