VENUS, in Astronomy

in astronomy, 2d planet from the sun; it is often called the evening star or morning star and is brighter than any object in the sky except the sun and the moon. Because its orbit lies between the sun and the orbit of the earth, Venus passes through phases like those of the moon, varying from a large bright crescent when the planet is near inferior conjunction (nearest the earth) to a smaller silvery disk when it is at superior conjunction (farthest from the earth). Since its greatest elongation (the angle made between the sun, the earth, and Venus) is 47°, it can never be seen much longer than 3 hr after sunset or 3 hr before sunrise. Venus revolves around the sun at a mean distance of c.67 million mi (107 million km) in a nearly circular orbit, and its period of revolution is about 225 days. It comes closer to the earth than any other planet, being c.26 million mi (42 million km) away at inferior conjunction. Venus is often referred to as the sister planet of the earth, because it is only slightly smaller in both size and mass. Several important differences, however, exist between the two planets. Although Venus is covered with a thick blanket of clouds that hides its surface from view, much has been learned of the conditions on Venus from U.S. and Soviet space probes. These probes indicate a surface temperature of about 890 degrees Fahrenheit (475 degrees Celsius) and an atmospheric pressure as great as 100 times that at the earth's surface. The thick atmosphere is composed mainly of carbon dioxide, with a slight amount of water vapor and a trace of nitrogen and other elements. The high surface temperature is assumed to result partly from the greenhouse effect; radiation passing through the atmosphere heats the surface, but the heat is blocked by the enveloping carbon dioxide from escaping back out through the atmosphere. Studies also indicate that Venus rotates on its axis in a retrograde direction (opposite to the direction of revolution about the sun) with a period of about 243 days. Despite this slow rotation there is little observed temperature difference between the lighted and unlighted sides of the planet. The surface of Venus is thought to be erratic and stormy, although radio-wave data indicate the possible existence of two long mountain ranges. On May 15, 1991, the Magellan spacecraft completed the first of a series of radar maps of the Venusian surface, revealing details of a continentlike feature, called Aphrodite Terra, that crosses the planet's equator and is marked by geologic faults. A second such feature, Ishtar Terra, straddles the north polar region. Magellan also observed some craters, the results of impacts of asteroids and comets. Compared to the number of craters on other bodies of the inner solar system, this suggests that the surface of Venus is only about 800 million years old. No strong magnetic field comparable to that of the earth has been detected.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Venus in Astronomy  - 705 results

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...Great Syntax, The: See Almagest, The Greek astronomy, 11 obstacles to development of, 40 relationship...Christian condemnation of, 54 relationship to Greek astronomy, 21 Greenhouse effect, on Venus, 319 Greenstein, J., 350 Greenwich, England...
...a great deal more weight than those of his critics who have not devoted any special attention to lunar astronomy. The planets Mars and Venus have been closely studied by Pickering in the clear skies of Jamaica. In recent years Pickering has taken...
...Franklin Watts, 2001. . A Look at Venus. Danbury, CT: Franklin Watts...Vogt, Gregory L. Deep Space Astronomy. Brookfield, CT: Twenty...The Millbrook Press, 2001. Astronomy http://www astronomy com Sky Tclcscopc http...
...between. The ideas of Leucippus on astronomy thus show no advance on those of his...reckoning from the earth, to be: moon, Venus, sun, the other planets, the fixed stars. PLATOS views on astronomy have to be gathered from several different...
...inferior conjunction, when Venus is the brightest object in the...occasion when either Mercury or Venus reaches its greatest angular...perihelion or aphelion, and for Venus from 45 to 47 . Great Observatories A series of four NASA astronomy missions covering different...
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journal articles on: Venus in Astronomy  - 108 results

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...Mercury and Venus that was added...Martianus Capellas astronomy. In this case...Chaster Path of Venus (orbis Veneris castior) in the Astronomy of Martianus...Calcidius) for Venus circling the...the History of Astronomy, 23 (1992...
...observes that the planets Mercury, Venus, and Mars "are opaque bodies...Furthermore, when the planet Venus, as evening star, appears...response to Adam is figured as Venus reflected illumination by the...corrects Pascals more static astronomy in which both human and celestial...
...practical, and theoretical astronomy. Davids siblings frequently...anticipation of the transit of Venus in 1769, an important...observation of the transit of Venus in 1769. Upon his death...planets known at the time: Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter...served as Professor of Astronomy, Vice-Provost, and...
...it is apparent to anyone skilled in astronomy that if the sun and moon are in conjunction...be three stars joined together; that Venus changed its shape, waxing and waning...satellites of Jupiter, the phases of Venus, the nature and shape of Saturn, and...
...from observations of Mars and Venus, before he applied the model...inconclusive results for Mars and Venus. (Other planets, not visible...eye, were unknown to ancient astronomy.) This furnishes further evidence...distinguish Ptolemys work on Mars and Venus from the other planets. Perhaps...
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magazine articles on: Venus in Astronomy  - 187 results

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...for the transit of Venus the following month...episodes in the history of astronomy. His prediction that Venus would not transit the...and concluded that Venus would cross the Suns...for mathematics and astronomy. He attended the University...
Ski Venus by Kathryn S. Brown What kind of snow do...radar reflections from mountain ranges on Venus that appeared to be covered with snow. Studying...oxide. Pyrite simply could not exist on Venus. Now Fegley has a better explanation for...
...would argue that, for modern astronomy to be born, biblical cosmology...homogeneous surface; and that Venus has phases, which would not be expected if Venus moved uniformly around the...Genesis 1:16, whereas modern astronomy has established that stars...
...different as night and day. So, too, are Venus and Earth, sometimes described as sibling...Babylonians, Aphrodite by the Greeks, and Venus by the Romans. In more recent cultures, the name Venus remained synonymous with matchless beauty...
...Now is a great time to start watching Venus, since you can follow some interesting...of its greatest eastern elongation, Venus will be 46(deg) from the sun. Many astronomy books tell us that Venus cannot stray far from the sun and that...
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newspaper articles on: Venus in Astronomy  - 169 results

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...Cosmologist; A Farm Boy Changed Astronomy When He Observed the Transit of Venus, Which Occurs Again Tomorrow...he changed the course of astronomy and created the foundations...once more -the Transit of Venus. Tomorrow stargazers throughout...
...Cook; EXPLORER AIMS TO RECORD VENUS TRANSIT FROM ASIA. Byline...the Pacific ocean to chart a Venus Transit - one of the rarest...expedition to try and get people into astronomy, into science and get people...information from where the disc of Venus touches the sun at four points...
...18th Century Fascination with Astronomy. Chris Upton Reports. Byline...and the predicted transit of Venus had helped both to demystify and publicise the subject of astronomy. Understanding the heavens...Birminghams awakening interest in astronomy is told in Andrew Lounds fascinating...
...Scriptures. Using the data from his Venus discoveries he went on to find...as the "Father of British Astronomy" he had a tragically short...lives today. Thanks to him, Venus transits can be predicted with...VOTE 03 GENIUS: Father of astronomy Jeremiah Horrocks
Heavens Smiling on Us; Venus and Jupiter Line Up to Offer...night, you were not mistaken. Venus and Jupiter paired up above...Yandina. By last night, Venus, the left "eye", and Jupiter...data on it. "Ive been doing astronomy for 45 years and I havent seen...
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encyclopedia articles on: Venus in Astronomy  - 16 results

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VENUS , in astronomy in astronomy, 2d planet from the sun; it is often called the evening...Because its orbit lies between the sun and the orbit of the earth, Venus passes through phases like those of the moon, varying from a large bright...
...discoveries in both astronomy and physics; he...and the phases of Venus were persuasive...ray , and X-ray astronomy . The Surveyor and...and 5 (1967) to Venus, Mariner 4 (1965...Magellan probe to Venus (1990) and the...Short History of Astronomy (1961); J. L...
RADAR ASTRONOMY application of radar to the...technique differs from radio astronomy in that the celestial object...The first yield of radar astronomy was a much improved value...transmitters, the distances to Venus and Mercury were also measured...
CONJUNCTION , in astronomy in astronomy, alignment of two celestial bodies as seen from the earth. Conjunction...conjunction is perfect, an eclipse of the sun will occur. Mercury and Venus, the two inferior planets, have two positions of conjunction...
PHASE , in astronomy in astronomy, the measure of how much of the illuminated surface of a planet...this phase is called gibbous. Of the planets, only Mercury and Venus, whose orbits pass between the earth and sun, show all the phases...
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