A runaway greenhouse effect caused by Venus's thick atmosphere composed mainly of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gasses.
Venus surface is so hot it could melt led, Lots of space, has been crust
lava
The main reason why the surface of Venus is so hot is due to its thick atmosphere that traps heat from the sun, creating a greenhouse effect.
Because on Mars it is too cold so any water on the surface is frozen, while on Venus its too hot.
The main gas responsible for Venus's extreme heat is carbon dioxide, which makes up about 96% of its atmosphere. Carbon dioxide traps heat from the sun through a greenhouse effect, leading to high temperatures on the planet's surface.
The fact that Venus is so hot is the very reason it doesn't rain. When we say Venus is hot, we don't mean hot like a tropical country, we mean hotter than the inside of an oven on broil. Water cannot exist in the liquid there. Venus does have clouds of sulfuric acid, and a sort of "rain" does fall from them, but it evaporates before reaching the surface.
No it is impossible to land on Venus because of the hot surface heat that Venus has and plus there's lots of volcanoes, storms and lightning so if you do land, it will probably destroy or kill whatlands on Venus.
The surface of Venus is extremely hot, with temperatures reaching up to 900 degrees Fahrenheit. This extreme heat is due to the planet's thick atmosphere, which traps heat from the sun through a greenhouse effect. Venus has a dense atmosphere made up mostly of carbon dioxide, which prevents heat from escaping and causes the surface temperature to rise to such high levels. This makes Venus the hottest planet in our solar system, even hotter than Mercury, which is closer to the sun.
The surface of Venus is incredibly hot, with temperatures reaching around 900 degrees Fahrenheit (475 degrees Celsius). This extreme heat is due to the thick atmosphere of carbon dioxide that traps heat, leading to a runaway greenhouse effect on the planet.
No, it is so hot on the surface that led melts, and the pressure is 990 times the pressure on Earth.
Venus is very, VERY hot. Since it is only so close to the sun, it contains a lot of heat. Venus contains gravity and oxygen it is so hot that no one can live on it. The heat is about 842-895 degree's.
An American Mariner spacecraft in 1962 flew past Venus, and discovered it seemed to have a very hot surface. A Soviet spacecraft, Venera, subsequently entered the atmosphere of Venus and found it was not only very hot, but was composed mainly of carbon dioxide, with sulfuric acid clouds. These were of course both unmanned robots. A manned landing on Venus is VERY far in the future, given how bad the place is.