The atmosphere of Venus could be thought of as being more friendly to plants than to humans, but such high levels of CO2 trap so much heat that the runaway greenhouse effect would burn any Earth plants to cinders in short order.
No. The atmosphere of Venus is very toxic to Earth animals, plus its temperature is around 800 degrees.
No, humans or human-made objects have not landed or traveled on Venus. The extreme conditions on Venus, such as its thick atmosphere, high temperatures, and volcanic activity, pose significant challenges for landing and operating spacecraft on the planet's surface. However, several spacecraft have been sent to study Venus from orbit or by flying through its atmosphere.
The planet Venus has a highly toxic atmosphere and cannot support life, so it has no plants.
There's a very low chance because there's hardly any oxygen on venus and it's atmosphere is pousnous. The ground is so hot that when it rains there(which it does)it evaporates before it hits the groundtheres also volcanoes and stuff which I doubt plants could survive and the ground is to hot for them to survive.
The atmosphere of Venus could be thought of as being more friendly to plants than to humans, but such high levels of CO2 trap so much heat that the runaway greenhouse effect would burn any Earth plants to cinders in short order.
Venus is very hot with poisonous gases in the atmosphere, Mars is very cold with a low atmospheric pressure.
This is absolutely incorrect. Venus's carbon atmosphere is so thick and dense that temperatures on venus reach 464 degrees celcius, and many, many volcanic eruptions are occurring every second on venus. Since there is so much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, it would be impossible for humans to breathe. Those are just some obvious reasons why venus is inhabitable to humans.
No. The atmosphere of Venus is very toxic to Earth animals, plus its temperature is around 800 degrees.
No, humans or human-made objects have not landed or traveled on Venus. The extreme conditions on Venus, such as its thick atmosphere, high temperatures, and volcanic activity, pose significant challenges for landing and operating spacecraft on the planet's surface. However, several spacecraft have been sent to study Venus from orbit or by flying through its atmosphere.
The planet Venus has a highly toxic atmosphere and cannot support life, so it has no plants.
It's a little more complicated than that. The problem with Venus vis-a-vis human colonization is not just that there's too much carbon dioxide in the atmosphere... there's too much atmosphere, period, and it's toxic for other reasons, specifically too much sulfur oxides. But that could certainly be a part of terraforming Venus.
The atmosphere on the surface of Venus is cloudy.
* 22% of Mercury's atmosphere is hydrogen. * Venus does not have pure hydrogen in its atmosphere, but does have hydrogen chloride and hydrogen fluoride. * Earth has almost no hydrogen. * Mars does not contain any significant amount of hydrogen in its atmosphere. * Jupiter's atmosphere is roughly 90% hydrogen! * Saturn's atmosphere has even more: about 97% is hydrogen! * Uranus' atmosphere is 83% hydrogen. * Neptune's atmosphere contains 74% hydrogen.
There's a very low chance because there's hardly any oxygen on venus and it's atmosphere is pousnous. The ground is so hot that when it rains there(which it does)it evaporates before it hits the groundtheres also volcanoes and stuff which I doubt plants could survive and the ground is to hot for them to survive.
what is the atomosphere of venus
venus atmosphere is cloudy,and its are made of volcanoes and lava