We do know that it is incredibly HOT on the surface; the thick clouds are filled with sulfuric acid.
You might think that it is a planet-wide "super-summer".
There are no large seasonal variations on Venus.
The axis of Venus is not tilted significantly away from the perpendicular to its orbit. So, the amount of sunlight received at a particular place doesn't change much as Venus orbits the Sun.
Also, the temperature is remarkably constant even during the long nights on Venus.
Venus rotates very slowly and a "night" there lasts much longer than on Earth.
Probably because of the effect of the extremely dense carbon dioxide atmosphere, the temperatures remain very high. So, Venus is hot everywhere,
day and night, all year.
500days
Spring or summer
Venus does not have seasons. due to the thick carbon dioxide atmosphere, Venus experiences temperatures of around 864 degrees Fahrenheit throughout the year.
No it doesn't have petals till the flowering season.
Yes. In this season, Venus is a "morning star"; get up about 90 minutes before dawn, and look to the east.
Brandi "Venus" Arceneaux
None at all. Venus has a global "season" the year round irrelevant of "your" location.
Venus. This season, in January 2011, Venus _is_ the Morning Star. Go outside before sunrise and look east; except for the Moon, Venus is the brightest thing there.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In the first season, they died in order of Jupiter, Mercury, Venus, Mars. In the third season, they died in order of Neptune, Uranus. In the fifth season, they died in order of the Inners (Mars, Mercury, Venus, Jupiter), then Pluto and Saturn. Then, after a while, Uranus and Neptune died because their Galactica bracelets got taken from them.
The brightest planet at night, depending on phase, is Venus. Jupiter and Mars can be a close second, depending on the season.
I have looked into that myself and so far as much as I know, I do not believe there is a season two. I am not fully 100% sure if I am correct but so far there isn't any.
The brightest planet at night, depending on phase, is Venus. Jupiter and Mars can be a close second, depending on the season.