THE STRUCTURE OF VENUS
Given its closer proximity to
the sun one would expect Venus to be somewhat warmer than the earth.
In fact it is an inferno, with a surface temperature of 890F, a
temperature hot enough to melt lead and zinc, it is actually hotter
than Mercury's surface, despite being nearly twice as far from the
sun. The explanation for this disparity lies in Venus' atmosphere
of carbon dioxide, a layer so dense that the pressure at the surface
of the planet is nearly a hundred times that of the earth. This
thick blanket traps the suns heat at the planet's surface, producing
an extreme greenhouse effect, and thus scorching temperatures.
Cloud layers stretch upward from an altitude of 30 miles above the
surface, yet these are no ordinary clouds, they consist almost entirely
of sulfuric acid droplets, and are spread relatively uniformly across
the planet.
The first space craft to visit
the planet was Mariner 2 in 1962, yet it has been subsequently visited
by many others including Pioneer Venus, Venera 7 (the first space
craft to land on another planet) and Venera 9, which returned the
first images of the surface. However in more recent times the orbiting
space craft Magellan has produced detailed maps of the surface using
radar.
Earth's crust is recycled and
shaped by plate tectonics, in which the continents ride on huge
plates. Between 1990 and 1992 radar survey by the Magellan orbiter
showed a much different process at work on Venus. Dome like structures
are evidence of upwellings of lava in the planets mantle and these,
together with widespread volcanic activity, are largely responsible
for recycling the crust and sculpting a desolate landscape. Nearly
85% of the surface consists of flat lava plains which resemble the
basaltic Maria, or seas of the moon. There are huge volcanoes and
mountain ranges, the Maxwell mountains rise nearly 7.5 miles above
the surrounding plains. The planets two great landmasses are Aphrodite
Terra, which girths a portion of the planet from the equator into
the southern hemisphere, and Ishtar Terra, in the high latitudes
of the Northern hemisphere. Venus has an estimated 900 impact craters,
all larger than 2 miles in diameter, due to the fact that the dense
atmosphere has protected the surface from small asteroids and comets.
Magellan's images also show a wide variety of additional features,
including pancake volcanoes, which seem to be very thick eruptions
of lava, and coronae, which seemed to be collapsed domes over large
magma chambers.
Venus rotates very slowly, once
every 243 earth days, which is 18 days longer than it takes to rotate
around the sun. Furthermore it spins not from west to east like
the other planets, but from east to west. This slow retrograde motion
has a strange effect on the Venusian calendar. If you were on Venus
you would see the sun rise in the west, cross the sky and set in
the east, some 59 earth days later. It is thought that maybe some
earlier impact between Venus and another body may have resulted
in this backward course.
Venus probably once had large
amounts of water like earth, but it all boiled away, of which Earth
may have suffered the same fate had it been just a little closer
to the sun. The interior of Venus is probably very similar to that
of the earth, an iron core about 3000km 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. Lastly this planet has no magnetic
field or satellites.
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