This would depend on whether somebody climbed out the spacecraft wearing an advanced protective suit. The atmospheric pressure on Venus is high enough to crush a nuclear submarine like a tin can and the surface temperature is at least twice as hot as your oven on maximum setting. without the futuristic protective suit, somebody would cook very quickly because it would be like being put in a large high pressure/temperature pressure cooker!
Mars.!!! However, spacecraft have landed on Venus, but the atmosphere on Venus is such that spacecraft are crushed/collpase. So no exploration has been done on Venus.
venus
the first encounter with another planet. it was a spacecraft sent by NASA to venus. it measured venus' temperature and is now thought to be orbiting the sun.
venus
Venus was the planet that the spacecraft Magellan enabled scientists to research extensively.
I believe that an American mariner spacecraft discovered that the surface of Venus was hot. But what is the Americans name?
Spacecraft visits have revealed that various surface features exist on Venus.
No human has ever landed on Venus. Spacecraft have been sent there, but due to the conditions they do not last very long.
The first spacecraft to observe Venus was the Venera 3 in 1962.
it wouldnt be able to breathe and you wold die:)
name the most recent spacecraft to orbit venus name the most recent spacecraft to orbit venus
The surface of Venus is unobservable due to the thick cloud cover. Some Russian Venera spacecraft have landed there to get a glimpse of the rocky surface, and the entire planet has been mapped by radar.
venus was the first planet visited by the American spacecraft
Mars.!!! However, spacecraft have landed on Venus, but the atmosphere on Venus is such that spacecraft are crushed/collpase. So no exploration has been done on Venus.
it wouldnt be able to breathe and you wold die:)
Yes
Spacecraft from several nations have visited Venus, including the Soviet Union’s successful Venera series made the first landings on the surface of Venus. NASA’s Magellan mission, which studied Venus from 1990 to 1994, used radar to map 98 percent of the planet’s surface. Currently, Japan’s Akatsuki is studying Venus from orbit.� 650 BC