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If by Oxygen you mean pure Oxygen molecules, then no, only possible trace amounts. However, there is massive amounts of Carbon Dioxide (95% of Venus's atmosphere) which can be fairly easily be converted into oxygen.
The atmosphere on the surface of Venus is cloudy.
No, Venus is not green. The surface of Venus is mostly covered in a reddish-brown color due to its volcanic activity and the presence of iron-rich minerals. Venus appears white in the sky because its thick atmosphere reflects sunlight.
what is the atomosphere of venus
Earth, Mars, and Venus are the three planets in our solar system that show signs of oxygen in their atmosphere, although the levels and presence of oxygen vary significantly among them. Earth has a rich oxygen atmosphere, while Mars and Venus have much lower levels of oxygen.
Except earth and Venus, no other planet has atmosphere. Earth's atmosphere absorbs UV rays due to presence of Ozone but Venus does not have Ozone and it's atmosphere is made up of greenhouse gases.
venus atmosphere is cloudy,and its are made of volcanoes and lava
Venus has a thick atmosphere. Mercury does not have an atmosphere.
No, Earth's atmosphere is not as thick as Venus'. Venus has an atmosphere that is composed mainly of carbon dioxide, with a pressure about 92 times greater than Earth's atmosphere. This makes Venus' atmosphere much thicker and denser than Earth's.
No. Venus is often considered Earth's twin, due to its almost identical mass, presence of an atmosphere, and proximity.
Because Venus doesn't have oxygen. It's atmosphere is not as good as Earth's, instead of oxygen, Venus contains greenhouse gasses, carbon dioxide, and sulfur dioxide. The atmosphere on Venus is quite thick and because it is carbon instead of oxygen life can't exist on this planet including us humans, because in order to live you need oxygen. And without oxygen life cannot live on Venus. So the atmosphere is nothing like ours.
Venus has yellow clouds of sulfuric acid in its atmosphere. The presence of sulfuric acid in the clouds contributes to Venus' extreme greenhouse effect, making it the hottest planet in our solar system despite not being the closest to the Sun.