Want this question answered?
This may be a vague reference to the fact that there are roughly 2 of Venus's "solar days" in one Venus year.
Venus' rotation is so slow that I'm not sure it has a solstice.The axial tilt of the planet Venus is very small, and the planet rotates VERY slowly. The summer solstice on Venus would be a matter of negligible importance.Additionally, there is no Venus calendar by which it could be measured.
The venus flytrap, the plant, is a living thing.Venus, the planet, is not.
There are no known inhabitants of the planet Venus, human or otherwise. (For the US cities, see the related questions below)
Venus is a deadly world where the surface temperature is hot enough to cook a meal in mere minutes! And with the atmosphere mostly carbon dioxide, it makes Venus a highly toxic place. No living thing would ever be able to survive on Venus.
It is about people living on Venus since something is wrong with earth. It rains everyday in Venus and a girl name Margot, who came to Venus when she was 3, misses the sun. The scientists say that this exact day every seven years that the sun will come out on Venus for 2 hours or so. But the mean kids lock Margot in a closet. I dont want to give it away so read the story its super good!!!!! Correction: Margot came to venus when she was 4. And it is about how margot misses the sun so much that her hair color changes and her eyes lost there blueness and her lips redness. Correction: There wasn't anything wrong with the Earth since Margot's family was going to go to Earth because it was "vital" for Margot.
This may be a vague reference to the fact that there are roughly 2 of Venus's "solar days" in one Venus year.
The children reject Margot's description of the sun because they have never experienced it themselves. Living on Venus, they have only known a world of constant rain and darkness, making it hard for them to believe Margot's memories of the sun. Their disbelief is fueled by jealousy towards Margot, which leads them to dismiss her truth.
In "All Summer in a Day" by Ray Bradbury, the verbal irony lies in the children eagerly awaiting the one day of sunshine on Venus, only for Margot to miss experiencing it because they lock her in a closet. This creates a stark contrast between the expectations of the children and the reality of Margot's situation.
No. Venus does not have seasons.
Margot is the only child who remembers the sun because she had moved from Earth to Venus when she was very young, and experienced the sun's warmth and brightness before the perpetual rain and fog of Venus. The other children have only lived on Venus and so have never experienced the sun.
What is the surface of Venus compared in the book All Summer in a Day
The children wouldn't believe what Margot was saying about the sun
The main characters in "All Summer in a Day" are Margot, a young girl who misses the sun on Venus; her classmates who bully her; and the teacher who tries to bring harmony among the students. The story focuses on Margot's longing for the sun and her classmates' jealousy towards her.
The situational irony in "All Summer in a Day" by Ray Bradbury is that the children on Venus miss experiencing the sun because they are so focused on their jealousy and mistreatment of Margot, the one child who had seen it before. This causes them to ironically miss the rare occasion of the sun coming out on the planet.
There are no people (not pople) living on Venus.
Venus' rotation is so slow that I'm not sure it has a solstice.The axial tilt of the planet Venus is very small, and the planet rotates VERY slowly. The summer solstice on Venus would be a matter of negligible importance.Additionally, there is no Venus calendar by which it could be measured.