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Venus Inside and Out



A global view of the surface of Venus from Magellan.
Click on image for full size version (138K GIF)
Image from: NASA

Venus is the second planet from the Sun, and is Earth's closest neighbor in the solar system. Venus is the brightest object in the sky after the Sun and the Moon, and sometimes looks like a bright star in the morning or evening sky. The planet is slightly smaller than Earth, and its interior is similar to Earth. We can't see the surface of Venus from Earth, because it is covered with thick clouds that strongly reflect sunlight. However, space missions to Venus have shown us that its surface is covered with craters, over 1600 major volcanoes, mountains, large highland terrains, and vast lava plains. The surface of Venus is not where you'd like to be, with temperatures reaching more than 450C (approaching 900F - high enough to melt lead), an atmosphere 90 times heavier than our own, and clouds of sulfuric acid floating around to top it off!

The Poles of Venus

Radar Map of Northern Hemisphere

Radar Map of Northern Hemisphere (shows height)

Radar Map of Southern Hemisphere (shows height)

North Pole Radar Map with Place Names

South Pole Radar Map with Place Names


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Last modified May 18, 2009 by Randy Russell.
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