yes it does but it is to hot for people
Lightning on Venus is estimated to occur more frequently than on Earth, with some studies suggesting it happens several times a week. This is due to the planet's dense atmosphere, which is rich in sulfuric acid, providing ideal conditions for electrical discharges.
No that would be impossible.. Venus is far to hot to have any kind of life on it let alone vegetation... Venus is actually the hottest planet in our solar system, if you were to fall through the Venusian clouds right now as you would fall to the surface you would melt before you even touched the ground.
The surface temperature on Venus can reach up to about 900 degrees Fahrenheit (475 degrees Celsius). This extreme heat is primarily due to a thick atmosphere composed mainly of carbon dioxide, which creates a runaway greenhouse effect. As a result, Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system, despite not being the closest to the Sun.
Venus glows because it has a thick layer of clouds made of sulfur dioxide and sulfuric acid that reflect sunlight, creating a bright appearance. The clouds also trap heat from the sun, causing a greenhouse effect that further contributes to Venus's glow.
No because it has such a strong atmosphere so liquid acid rains and evaporates before it hits the ground.
Carbondioxide and Gas.
on the ground
Usually in marshy ground.
Sulfuric acid falls from the clouds high above the surface of Venus, but it evaporates long before reaches the ground.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Pluto
In the Solar System, that would be Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars.
It is very thick. At ground level and at 20 deg C, Venus's atmosphere is around 50 times as dense as the Earth's.
Venus is covered with clouds It's atmosphere is 92% carbon dioxide, 3% nitrogen, and there are small amounts of water vapor, argon, carbon monoxide, neon, and sulfur vapor. Venus is covered by clouds of sulfuric acid. The sulfuric acid rains down to Venus, but evaporates before touching the ground.
Lightning on Venus is estimated to occur more frequently than on Earth, with some studies suggesting it happens several times a week. This is due to the planet's dense atmosphere, which is rich in sulfuric acid, providing ideal conditions for electrical discharges.
No that would be impossible.. Venus is far to hot to have any kind of life on it let alone vegetation... Venus is actually the hottest planet in our solar system, if you were to fall through the Venusian clouds right now as you would fall to the surface you would melt before you even touched the ground.
The surface temperature on Venus can reach up to about 900 degrees Fahrenheit (475 degrees Celsius). This extreme heat is primarily due to a thick atmosphere composed mainly of carbon dioxide, which creates a runaway greenhouse effect. As a result, Venus is the hottest planet in the solar system, despite not being the closest to the Sun.
Less than a quarter of the sunlight falling on venus reaches the surface. Light that gets through the clouds warms the ground which, in turn, releases the heat in the form of infrared radiation. Like glass trapping heat in a green house, the atmosphere traps the infrared radiation, so the temperature on Venus builds up and is always very hot