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Venus

This is a combination of images taken by the Magellan spacecraft. The colors have been altered so you can see all the differences in Venus’s surface. Magellan used radar to get information about the surface of Venus, which we can’t normally see because of the thick, cloudy atmosphere.

Venus is the second planet from the Sun. In English, Venus is named after the Roman goddess of love and beauty. As the second-brightest natural object in the night sky after the Moon, Venus can cast shadows and, rarely, is visible to the naked eye in broad daylight.  Venus lies within Earth’s orbit, and so never appears to venture far from the Sun, either setting in the west just after dusk or rising in the east a bit before dawn. Venus orbits the Sun every 224.7 Earth days.  With a rotation period of 243 Earth days, it takes longer to rotate about its axis than any planet in the Solar System and does so in the opposite direction to all but Uranus (meaning the Sun rises in the west and sets in the east).   Venus does not have any moons, a distinction it shares only with Mercury among planets in the Solar System.

 

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