Well, friend, Venus doesn't have traditional water like we do here on Earth. Instead, Venus is so hot that any water would evaporate into steam. Not to worry though, Venus does have traces of ice in its high mountains, which adds to the magical diversity of our universe. Let's paint a beautiful cosmic world with watercolors, shall we? Amazing things can happen in our vast, awe-inspiring universe. Just you wait and see!
Only Earth has Liquid water, Ice, and Gas. Many planets have clouds in the atmosphere; Venus and Jupiter, for example. But the clouds of Venus are made of sulfuric acid at several hundred degrees. Jupiter's moon Europa _might_ contain liquid water beneath the ice; there are interesting ridges on the surface that suggest water surging from cracks in the ice and then freezing. It will take a dedicated probe to discover what's going on there.
On Earth, water is found in all three "states", such as gas (water vapor), liquid and solid (ice). On Mars, water exists as a gas and as a solid, but the evidence of the Mars Rovers indicate that liquid water was once plentiful there. Water is only found as a gas on Venus. We have very little knowledge of Mercury yet, but we do not expect to find any water at all there. The gas giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune) may contain some ice crystals in a solid form, but we don't know for certain. Jupiter's moon Europa probably has water ice, and may contain oceans of liquid water below the ice. No guarantees yet. For the other moons of the outer planets, water ice may be plentiful, for example in Saturn's rings, but probably all as ice crystals.
No, Venus does not have frozen water on its surface. The surface temperatures on Venus are extremely hot, reaching up to 900 degrees Fahrenheit (475 degrees Celsius), which is hot enough to melt and evaporate any water present.
Sort of, depending on who is talking... As seen through a modestly good telescope, the poles show white caps that grow and shrink with the seasons. They are not solid caps of ice, metres or even kilometres thick, such as we have on Earth, but just a thin frost of carbon dioxide crystals ("dry ice") and water crystals (snow or hoar frost) mainly on the ground surface. There is more material underground, but not very much and not visible from off the planet. If that is what you are willing to call a planetary ice cap, then the answer is yes. If not, then bad luck! No!
Earth is the only planet in our solar system known to have liquid water on its surface and a dense atmosphere suitable for supporting life as we know it. Other planets like Mars might have some water ice at the poles, and Venus has a thick atmosphere but no liquid water on its surface.
ice
Scientists think there may once have been large bodies of water on Venus, like oceans on Earth, but they all evaporated or something into space.
None. Venus is much too hot to have any ice.
Venus: Not much at all. Mars : Quite a bit in the form of ice, near the poles. Also probably some under the surface.
Mercury, Venus, Mars, Pluto have rock as surface Earth has water and rock as surface Uranus and Neptune have ice as surface(under the ice there's water) Jupiter and Saturn have no surface at all
Only Earth has Liquid water, Ice, and Gas. Many planets have clouds in the atmosphere; Venus and Jupiter, for example. But the clouds of Venus are made of sulfuric acid at several hundred degrees. Jupiter's moon Europa _might_ contain liquid water beneath the ice; there are interesting ridges on the surface that suggest water surging from cracks in the ice and then freezing. It will take a dedicated probe to discover what's going on there.
no life of water on venus
Mercury and Maybe Venus
There is no evidence to show that there is water on the planet Venus.
no, it is covered with volcanoes
no
No! The Hottest Water On Earth is 407 celsius and Venus Is Hotter Than That! You Can't Get Water Hotter Than Venus!