Not under the existing environmental conditions.
The planet Venus has many of the elements found on Earth, but conditions there are not hospitable to human life. It is too hot (average 464 °C or 867°F) and the carbon dioxide atmosphere has a crushing pressure nearly 100 times that at sea level on Earth (92 bar). Under these conditions, there is also no liquid water on the planet's surface, and the only "rain" (high up in the atmosphere) consists of sulfuric acid!
Floating Cities
Several novel proposals have suggested establishing aerial colonies 50 kilometers above the surface, where the temperature and pressure are closer to Earth's.
(see related link below)
people can not live on venus because:
-its clouds are yellow cuz their made of sulfuric compounds
-there are thousands of volcanoes
-the climate is EXTREMELY warm
but about 4 billion years ago venus used to be just like earth with oceans and everything but then the sun got brighter and all the water evaporated. so it is now dry and full of volcanoes
The planet Venus is the second closest planet to the sun. It is named after the goddess of love from Greek mythology. It is not inhabitable.
Certainly not all of it, otherwise the earth would be inhabitable. Much as Venus is.
This is absolutely incorrect. Venus's carbon atmosphere is so thick and dense that temperatures on venus reach 464 degrees celcius, and many, many volcanic eruptions are occurring every second on venus. Since there is so much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, it would be impossible for humans to breathe. Those are just some obvious reasons why venus is inhabitable to humans.
Inhabitable
lots
because there is no oxygen there
About 43%.
The constellation itself may have undiscovered planets around one of the stars that may turn out to be inhabitable, but we have no current knowledge of an inhabitable planet in that vicinity, or around any of the individual stars that make up that constellation.
inhabitable
constant sewage from inhabitable places.
5
The root word of "habitual" is "habit," which comes from the Latin word "habitus" meaning "condition" or "character."