1 / 34

Venus

Venus. Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 11. Venus -- The Goddess of Beauty. Venus is one of the brightest planets in the sky. Venus from Earth. Venus is only seen near the Sun Venus shows phases Venus is covered with clouds. Venus Facts. Size : 95% Earth Orbit : 0.7 AU

osias
Download Presentation

Venus

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Venus Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 11

  2. Venus -- The Goddess of Beauty • Venus is one of the brightest planets in the sky

  3. Venus from Earth • Venus is only seen near the Sun • Venus shows phases • Venus is covered with clouds

  4. Venus Facts • Size: 95% Earth • Orbit: 0.7 AU • Description:

  5. Venus’s Retrograde Rotation • When viewed from above the north pole of the Earth, most of the planets: • Venus rotates clockwise • Why is Venus upside down? • We have no evidence of this, however

  6. Retrograde Rotation

  7. Rotation Rate • Venus rotates on its axis with a period of 243 days • Day is longer than a year • Reason is unclear

  8. Venus from Pioneer

  9. Venus’s Atmosphere • In the 1960’s and 1970’s probes were dropped into Venus’s atmosphere • Composition: • Pressure: • Temperature: 750 K (hottest planet in solar system)

  10. Chemicals in Atmosphere • A lot of sulfur in atmosphere • Sulfuric acid has vapor point such that it boils on the surface but condenses in the atmosphere to form clouds • Also, hydrofluoric acid (HF), hydrochloric acid (HCl) and other corrosive compounds

  11. 68 km and up -- 48-68 km – 30-40 km – 0-30 km – Temperature: Pressure: 90 atmospheres at surface Structure of Atmosphere

  12. Temperature in Atmosphere

  13. Formation of Atmosphere 1) Early Venus heats up, water evaporates 2) 3) Ultraviolet light disassociates water and destroys it 4) 5) 6) Volcanoes outgas sulfur, forms sulfuric acid clouds

  14. Venera 13 Mock-up

  15. Venera 13 on Venus

  16. The Surface of Venus • Chemical analysis indicates that surface rocks are similar to basalt, a volcanic rock

  17. InterludePlanetary Configurations

  18. Magellan Maps Venus • Venus’s atmosphere is so thick that you cannot see the surface from orbit • Our map of Venus comes from the Magellan spacecraft (1990)

  19. Radar Map of Venus

  20. Global Surface of Venus • Surface is generally level (smoothed by lava) • Many volcanoes and lava features • The entire surface is the same age • Surface features named after women

  21. Gula Mons

  22. Vires-Akka Chasma

  23. Alcott Crater

  24. A Corona

  25. Lava Domes

  26. The Highlands of Aphrodite Terra

  27. Danu Mountains

  28. Wind Blown Streak

  29. Sif Mons

  30. Volcanism on Venus • Evidence for Volcanism: • smoothed surface • lava channels • visible shield features

  31. The Interior of Venus • No plate tectonics • moving lava disturbs the crust enough to produce a few mountains and highlands • too hot or too dry? • Venus probably has a molten core

  32. Summary • Earth-Sized, hot, thick atmosphere • (Earth’s evil twin) • Rotates slowly and upside-down • Studied by Venera landers and Magellan radar mapper

  33. Summary: Atmosphere • Composed of CO2 with sulfuric acid clouds • Thick (90 atmospheres) : • No water to wash out CO2 • Hot (750 K): • Powerful greenhouse effect

  34. Summary: Surface • Volcanism shapes surface and outgases sulfur • See volcanoes and lava flow channels • Surface mostly flat with a few highlands • Nature of core is unknown

More Related