You cannot, because of the permanent cloud cover.
Surface materialsbasaltic rock and altered materials
the atmosphere is so thick.
No. The surface of Venus is obscured by thick clouds. If you could fly above the clouds then you would see the same stars that you see from Earth.
Yes. Venus has the same sun that we do, only it is closer. You cannot see the sun from the surface of Venus due to thick clouds.
From Earth, Mars. We can see the surface with telescopes, because there are no clouds to obstruct our view. However, Venus is a desolate wasteland where the green house effect went wild, and now there are sulfur clouds and rain, and we cannot see the surface.
You could not see the stars from the surface of Venus. The sky there is obscured by thick clouds. If you were to fly above the clouds, though, you could see the stars.
Venus is shrouded in thick clouds of sulfuric acid, which block visible light from reaching its surface. These clouds reflect about 70% of the sunlight that hits them, causing Venus to appear very bright in the sky. Additionally, Venus has a dense atmosphere that further obscures any surface features.
You might see a telescope left behind or a asteroid on the surface left behind.
Venus is visible in the night-sky for the same reason we see the moon - Sunlight is reflected off the surface.
The "topography" of Venus is the three dimensional shape of the surface of Venus.
The atmosphere on the surface of Venus is cloudy.
Mars