| 
  Astronomy Picture of the Day   | 
APOD: 2004 May 16 - Venus: Earth's Cloudy Twin 
 Explanation: 
This picture by the 
Galileo spacecraft shows just how cloudy 
Venus is.  
Venus is very similar to Earth in size
and mass - and so is sometimes referred to as Earth's sister planet - but 
Venus
has a quite different climate. 
Venus' thick clouds and closeness to the 
Sun
(only Mercury is closer) make it
the hottest planet - much hotter than the 
Earth. 
Humans could not survive there, and no life of any sort has ever been found.
When Venus is visible it is usually the brightest object in the sky 
after the Sun and the Moon. 
More than 20 spacecraft have visited 
Venus
including Venera 9, which landed on the surface, and 
Magellan,
which used radar to peer through the clouds and make a map of the 
surface. 
This visible light picture of Venus
was taken by the Galileo spacecraft 
that orbited Jupiter from 1995 to 2003.  
Many things about Venus remain unknown, including the cause of  
mysterious bursts of radio waves.
APOD: 2003 May 14 - The North Pole of Venus 
 Explanation: 
If you could look down on the 
North Pole of Venus what would you see?  
The Magellan probe that orbited 
Venus from 1990 to 1994 was able to peer through the 
thick Venusian clouds 
and build up the 
above image by emitting and re-detecting cloud-penetrating 
radar.  
Visible as the bright patch below central North is Venus' 
highest mountain 
Maxwell Montes.  
Other notable features include numerous mountains, 
coronas, 
impact craters, tessera, ridges, and lava flows.  
Although the size and mass of 
Venus are similar to the Earth, its thick carbon-dioxide atmosphere has 
trapped heat so efficiently that surface temperature usually exceeds 700 kelvins, hot enough to melt 
lead.
APOD: 2003 November 30 - A Venus Landing 
 Explanation: 
This image is part of the first colour panoramic view from 
Venus. 
A TV camera on the 
Soviet Venera 13 lander that parachuted to the surface on 1982 March 1 transmitted it. 
Venus' clouds are composed of 
sulphuric acid droplets while its surface temperature 
is about 482 degrees 
Celsius at an atmospheric pressure of 92 times that of 
sea-level on Earth. 
Despite these harsh conditions, the 
Venera 13 lander survived long enough to 
send back a series of images and perform an analysis of the 
Venusian soil. 
Part of the lander itself is visible in the 
lower right portion of the image. 
An earlier Soviet Venus lander, 
Venera 7 (1970), was the first spacecraft 
to return data from the surface of another planet.
 Authors & editors: 
Robert Nemiroff
(MTU) &
Jerry Bonnell
(USRA)
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 NASA Official:  Jay Norris.
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& Michigan Tech. U.