Tag: Venus’ atmosphere

ISRO-powered Venus mission: Top 5 things to know about the Shukrayaan mission
Technology

ISRO-powered Venus mission: Top 5 things to know about the Shukrayaan mission

[ad_1] After the success of the Chandrayaan-3 mission as well as the Aditya-L1 mission, ISRO is all set to launch its upcoming Venus mission. The ISRO Venus mission has been dubbed as the Shukrayaan mission, for which ISRO chief S. Somanath has shared an update. Somanath says the project payloads have been fully developed now. ISRO Chairman, while addressing Indian National Science Academy in Delhi, talked about the unique characteristics of planet Venus and how Earth's atmosphere in future can turn toxic as did Shukrayaan's. Check out the significance of the Venus mission.Top 5 things to know about the ISRO Venus missionAccording to an ANI report, ISRO Chairman stated that the Venus mission is configured and the payloads have been developed to launch the project. Somanath said, "We hav...
Surprise! Oxygen detected on Venus in huge quantities on this hellish planet
Technology

Surprise! Oxygen detected on Venus in huge quantities on this hellish planet

[ad_1] In a surprising twist, German astronomers have uncovered the presence of oxygen in Venus's atmosphere, challenging the conventional understanding of the planet's composition. The revelation, which spans both the day and night sides of Venus, could hold key insights into the stark differences between Earth and its so-called "Second self." Despite Venus being Earth's closest neighbour and sharing a strikingly similar size, with a radius of 6,052 km compared to Earth's 6,371 km, the two planets have notably distinct atmospheres. While that of the Earth has encouraged life to flower, that on Venus is exactly the opposite and can well be described as 'hellish'. In fact, Venus is known as the 'evil twin' of Earth.While Earth boasts a life-sustaining blend of oxygen and nitrogen, Venus ...
Venus: The trouble with sending people there
Technology

Venus: The trouble with sending people there

[ad_1] Venus, often called Earth’s “evil twin” planet, formed closer to the Sun and has since evolved quite differently. Venus, often called Earth's “evil twin” planet, formed closer to the Sun and has since evolved quite differently from our own planet. It has a “runaway” greenhouse effect (meaning heat is completely trapped), a thick carbon-dioxide-rich atmosphere, no magnetic field and a surface hot enough to melt lead.Several uncrewed scientific missions will study how and why that happened in the next decade. But now some scientists want to send a crewed mission there as well for a flyby. Is that a good idea? With a slightly smaller diameter than Earth, Venus orbits closer to the Sun. This means that any water on the sur...