Venus | Facts, Size, Surface, Color, Pictures, & Temperature

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  • Introduction & Top Questions
  • Basic astronomical data
  • The atmosphere
  • Interaction with the solar wind
  • Character of the surface
    • Surface composition
    • Surface features
      • Mountain belts
      • Plains deformation belts
      • Rifts
      • Coronae
      • Tesserae
      • Volcanic features
      • Impact craters
  • Interior structure and geologic evolution
  • Observations from Earth
  • Spacecraft exploration
References & Edit History Quick Facts & Related Topics Images, Videos & Interactives Venus colour-coded global image of the topography of Venus Interactive comparing planet sizes in the solar system from left to right: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. profile of Venus's atmosphere flat rock slabs and soil on the surface of Venus global topographic map of Venus Venusian arachnoid Maxwell Montes Akna Montes rift valley on Venus For Students Venus, view of the northern hemisphere based on radar data from the Magellan spacecraft. Venus summary Quizzes View of the Andromeda Galaxy (Messier 31, M31). Astronomy and Space Quiz The orbits of the planets and other elements of the solar system, including asteroids, Kuiper belt, Oort cloud, comet Space Odyssey Saturn. Saturn and its rings. Second largest planet of the solar system. Space Art Planets and the Earth’s Moon 1 July 2002: The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) satellite reveals a massive solar eruption more than 30 times the Earth's diameter. The eruption formed when a loop of a magnetic field over the surface of the Sun trapped hot gas. Brightest Star in the Solar System Nicolaus Copernicus. Nicolas Copernicus (1473-1543) Polish astronomer. In 1543 he published, forward proof of a Heliocentric (sun centered) universe. Coloured stipple engraving published London 1802. De revolutionibus orbium coelestium libri vi. All About Astronomy Related Questions
  • Is Venus similar to Earth?
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Venus
Venus Venus photographed in ultraviolet light by the Pioneer Venus Orbiter (Pioneer 12) spacecraft, February 26, 1979. Although Venus's cloud cover is nearly featureless in visible light, ultraviolet imaging reveals distinctive structure and pattern, including global-scale V-shaped bands that open toward the west (left). Added color in the image emulates Venus's yellow-white appearance to the eye. (more)
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External Websites
  • Live Science - Venus: Facts about the hellish planet next door
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  • National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Was Venus the first habitable world of our Solar System?
  • Natural History Museum - Planet Venus
  • Space.com - Venus: The scorching second planet from the sun
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  • Venus - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
  • Venus - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
Quick Summary Ask the Chatbot a Question Written by Steven W. Squyres Professor of Astronomy, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. Principal investigator for the science payload on the Mars Exploration Rover Project; past radar investigator on the Magellan mission to Venus. Steven W. Squyres Fact-checked by Britannica Editors Encyclopaedia Britannica's editors oversee subject areas in which they have extensive knowledge, whether from years of experience gained by working on that content or via study for an advanced degree.... Britannica Editors Last updated Dec. 2, 2025 History Table of Contents Table of Contents Quick Summary Ask the Chatbot a Question Top Questions

Is Venus similar to Earth?

Venus and Earth share similarities in their masses, sizes, densities, and relative locations in the solar system. Since they were presumably formed in the solar nebula from the same kind of rocky planetary building blocks, they also likely have similar overall chemical compositions. For these similarities, Venus has been called Earth’s twin.

How far is Venus from the Sun?

Venus orbits the Sun at a mean distance of 108 million km (67 million miles), which is about 0.7 times Earth’s distance from the Sun.

How does Venus look like?

When viewed through a telescope, Venus presents a brilliant yellow-white and a featureless face to the observer. Its obscured appearance results from the surface being hidden from sight by a continuous and permanent cover of clouds that are difficult to view in visible light.

How big is Venus?

Venus’s mean radius is 6,051.8 km (3,760.4 miles), or about 95 percent of Earth’s at the Equator, while its mass is 4.87 × 1024 kg, or 81.5 percent that of Earth.

What is Venus made of?

Venus has the most massive atmosphere of all the terrestrial planets. Its gaseous envelope is composed of more than 96 percent carbon dioxide and 3.5 percent molecular nitrogen. Trace amounts of other gases are present, including carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, water vapor, argon, and helium.

Venus, second planet from the Sun and sixth in the solar system in size and mass. No planet approaches closer to Earth than Venus; at its nearest it is the closest large body to Earth other than the Moon. Because Venus’s orbit is nearer the Sun than Earth’s, the planet is always roughly in the same direction in the sky as the Sun and can be seen only in the hours near sunrise or sunset. When it is visible, it is the most brilliant planet in the sky. Venus is designated by the symbol ♀.

colour-coded global image of the topography of Venus
colour-coded global image of the topography of Venus Colour-coded global image of the topography of Venus below its obscuring clouds, based on radar data from the Magellan spacecraft with supplemental data from Venera and Pioneer Venus missions and Earth-based radar studies. Violet hues mark the lowest elevations; red and pink hues, the highest ones. The hemisphere shown is centred on 0° longitude; north is at the top. The prominent red and pink region in the far north is the planet's highest terrain, Maxwell Montes. (more)

Venus was one of the five planets—along with Mercury, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn—known in ancient times, and its motions were observed and studied for centuries prior to the invention of advanced astronomical instruments. Its appearances were recorded by the Babylonians, who equated it with the goddess Ishtar, about 3000 bce, and it also is mentioned prominently in the astronomical records of other ancient civilizations, including those of China, Central America, Egypt, and Greece. Like the planet Mercury, Venus was known in ancient Greece by two different names—Phosphorus (see Lucifer) when it appeared as a morning star and Hesperus when it appeared as an evening star. Its modern name comes from the Roman goddess of love and beauty (the Greek equivalent being Aphrodite), perhaps because of the planet’s luminous jewel-like appearance.

Venus has been called Earth’s twin because of the similarities in their masses, sizes, and densities and their similar relative locations in the solar system. Because they presumably formed in the solar nebula from the same kind of rocky planetary building blocks, they also likely have similar overall chemical compositions. Early telescopic observations of the planet revealed a perpetual veil of clouds, suggestive of a substantial atmosphere and leading to popular speculation that Venus was a warm, wet world, perhaps similar to Earth during its prehistoric age of swampy carboniferous forests and abundant life. Scientists now know, however, that Venus and Earth have evolved surface conditions that could hardly be more different. Venus is extremely hot, dry, and in other ways so forbidding that it is improbable that life as it is understood on Earth could have developed there. One of scientists’ major goals in studying Venus is to understand how its harsh conditions came about, which may hold important lessons about the causes of environmental change on Earth.

Planetary data for Venus
*Time required for the planet to return to the same position in the sky relative to the Sun as seen from Earth.
mean distance from Sun 108,209,475 km (0.72 AU)
eccentricity of orbit 0.007
inclination of orbit to ecliptic 3.4°
Venusian year (sidereal period of revolution) 224.7 Earth days
maximum visual magnitude −4.6
mean synodic period* 584 Earth days
mean orbital velocity 35 km/sec
radius (mean) 6,051.8 km
surface area 4.6 × 108 km2
mass 4.87 × 1024 kg
mean density 5.24 g/cm3
mean surface gravity 887 cm/sec2
escape velocity 10.4 km/sec
rotation period (Venusian sidereal day) 243 Earth days (retrograde)
Venusian mean solar day 116.8 Earth days
inclination of equator to orbit 177.3°
atmospheric composition carbon dioxide, 96%; molecular nitrogen, 3.5%; water, 0.02%; trace quantities of carbon monoxide, molecular oxygen, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen chloride, and other gases
mean surface temperature 737 K (867 °F, 464 °C)
surface pressure at mean radius 95 bars
mean visible cloud temperature about 230 K (−46 °F, −43 °C)
number of known moons none

Basic astronomical data

Viewed through a telescope, Venus presents a brilliant yellow-white, essentially featureless face to the observer. Its obscured appearance results from the surface of the planet being hidden from sight by a continuous and permanent cover of clouds. Features in the clouds are difficult to see in visible light. When observed at ultraviolet wavelengths, the clouds exhibit distinctive dark markings, with complex swirling patterns near the equator and global-scale bright and dark bands that are V-shaped and open toward the west. Because of the all-enveloping clouds, little was known about Venus’s surface, atmosphere, and evolution before the early 1960s, when the first radar observations were undertaken and spacecraft made the first flybys of the planet.

View of the Andromeda Galaxy (Messier 31, M31). Britannica Quiz Astronomy and Space Quiz

Venus orbits the Sun at a mean distance of 108 million km (67 million miles), which is about 0.7 times Earth’s distance from the Sun. It has the least eccentric orbit of any planet, with a deviation from a perfect circle of only about 1 part in 150. Consequently, its distances at perihelion and aphelion (i.e., when it is nearest and farthest from the Sun, respectively) vary little from the mean distance. The period of its orbit—that is, the length of the Venusian year—is 224.7 Earth days. As Venus and Earth revolve around the Sun, the distance between them varies from a minimum of about 42 million km (26 million miles) to a maximum of about 257 million km (160 million miles).

Because Venus’s orbit lies within Earth’s, the planet exhibits phases like those of the Moon when viewed from Earth. In fact, the discovery of these phases by the Italian scientist Galileo in 1610 was one of the most important in the history of astronomy. In Galileo’s day the prevailing model of the universe was based on the assertion by the Greek astronomer Ptolemy almost 15 centuries earlier that all celestial objects revolve around Earth (see Ptolemaic system). Observation of the phases of Venus was inconsistent with this view but was consistent with the Polish astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus’s idea that the solar system is centred on the Sun. Galileo’s observation of the phases of Venus provided the first direct observational evidence for Copernican theory.

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The rotation of Venus on its axis is unusual in both its direction and its speed. The Sun and most of the planets in the solar system rotate in a counterclockwise direction when viewed from above their north poles; this direction is called direct, or prograde. Venus, however, rotates in the opposite, or retrograde, direction. Were it not for the planet’s clouds, an observer on Venus’s surface would see the Sun rise in the west and set in the east. Venus spins very slowly, taking about 243 Earth days to complete one rotation with respect to the stars—the length of its sidereal day. Venus’s spin and orbital periods are very nearly synchronized with Earth’s orbit such that, when the two planets are at their closest, Venus presents almost the same face toward Earth. The reasons for this are complex and have to do with the gravitational interactions of Venus, Earth, and the Sun, as well as the effects of Venus’s massive rotating atmosphere. Because Venus’s spin axis is tilted only about 3° toward the plane of its orbit, the planet does not have appreciable seasons. Also, Venus’s rotational period slowed by 6.5 minutes between two sets of measurements taken in 1990–92 and 2006–08. Astronomers as yet have no satisfactory explanation for Venus’s peculiar rotational characteristics. The idea cited most often is that, when Venus was forming from the accretion of planetary building blocks (planetesimals), one of the largest of these bodies collided with the proto-Venus in such a way as to tip it over and possibly slow its spin as well.

Venus’s mean radius is 6,051.8 km (3,760.4 miles), or about 95 percent of Earth’s at the Equator, while its mass is 4.87 × 1024 kg, or 81.5 percent that of Earth. The similarities to Earth in size and mass produce a similarity in density—5.24 grams per cubic centimetre for Venus, compared with 5.52 for Earth. They also result in a comparable surface gravity—humans standing on Venus would possess nearly 90 percent of their weight on Earth. Venus is more nearly spherical than most planets. A planet’s rotation generally causes a bulging at the equator and a slight flattening at the poles, but Venus’s very slow spin allows it to maintain its highly spherical shape.

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