Creamy-colored, cloudy Venus as seen from a spacecraft

Venus

Venus is the second planet from the Sun, and the sixth largest planet. It’s the hottest planet in our solar system.

All about venus

Storm clouds in white and pale red encircle Venus.

Venus is similar in size to Earth.

At its nearest Venus, is 38 million miles (about 61 million km) from Earth.

Illustration of a Venus landscape

Venus' day is longer than its year.

Gula Mons is displayed in this computer-simulated view from NASA Magellan spacecraft of the surface of Venus.

Venus has volcanic plains and rifts.

venus article

Venus' surface appears young (100s of millions of years.)

Graphic showing Venus temparures hot enough to melt lead.

Venus’ thick atmosphere traps heat.

Venus Cloud Tops Viewed by Hubble. This is a NASA Hubble Space Telescope ultraviolet-light image of the planet Venus, taken on January 24 1995, when Venus was at a distance of 70.6 million miles 113.6 million kilometers from Earth.

Venus' sulfuric acid clouds smell like rotten eggs.

venus flyby animation

More than 40 spacecraft have visited.

Venus

Venus is an unlikely place for life as we know it.

venus article

The Sun rises in the west; sets in the east.

Planet Venus Overview

Venus is a cloud-swaddled planet named for a love goddess, and often called Earth’s twin. But pull up a bit closer, and Venus turns hellish. Our nearest planetary neighbor, the second planet from the Sun, has a surface hot enough to melt lead. The atmosphere is so thick that, from the surface, the Sun is just a smear of light.

In some ways it is more an opposite of Earth than a twin: Venus spins backward, has a day longer than its year, and lacks any semblance of seasons. It might once have been a habitable ocean world, like Earth, but that was at least a billion years ago. A runaway greenhouse effect turned all surface water into vapor, which then leaked slowly into space. The present-day surface of volcanic rock is blasted by high temperatures and pressures. Asked if the surface of Venus is likely to be life-bearing today, we can give a quick answer: a hard “no.”

Further, Venus may hold lessons about what it takes for life to get its start ­– on Earth, in our solar system, or across the galaxy. The ingredients are all there, or at least, they used to be. By studying why our neighbor world went in such a different direction with regard to habitability, we could find out what could make other worlds right. And while it might sound absurd, we can’t rule out life on Venus entirely. Temperature, air pressure, and chemistry are much more congenial up high, in those thick, yellow clouds.

Eyes on the Solar System lets you explore the planets, their moons, asteroids, comets and the spacecraft exploring them from 1950 to 2050.

Why Return to Venus?

How did Venus become a sulfurous inferno, while Earth evolved to become the only known world with life?

Although not currently habitable, Venus lies within the Sun’s "Goldilocks zone," and may have been habitable before Earth.

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Venus
Contrary to its serene appearance, Venus is a world of intense heat, crushing atmospheric pressure and clouds of corrosive acid.
NASA/JPL-Caltech

VERITAS

Venus Emissivity, Radio science, InSAR, Topography, And Spectroscopy

VERITAS, together with NASA’s planned Davinci mission, represents the first U.S.-led exploration of Venus since Magellan three decades ago. The mission is designed to bring the VERITAS science investigations into a low, circular orbit around Venus, in order to collect high-resolution, global maps of the hellish surface hidden beneath the clouds.

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Illustration of VERITAS orbiter over Venus.
VERITAS: Expected to launch no earlier than 2031, VERITAS will map Venus’ surface to determine the planet’s geologic history and understand why it developed so differently than Earth.
NASA /JPL-Caltech

DAVINCI

Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble gases, Chemistry, and Imaging

DAVINCI will study Venus from its clouds down to the planet's surface – the first mission to study Venus using both flybys and a descent probe.

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DAVINCI Descent Probe
An illustration of the DAVINCI probe resting on the surface of Venus.
Credit: NASA/GSFC

EnVision

ESA's Cosmic Vision Program

ESA has selected EnVision to make detailed observations of Venus. As a key partner in the mission, NASA is providing the Synthetic Aperture Radar, called VenSAR, to make high-resolution measurements of the planet’s surface features.

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Illustration showing EnVision in front of alternate versions of Venus. One version is warm and wet. The other is the rugged wasteland we know today.
Artist's concept of EnVision at Venus.
Credt: ESA

Pop Culture

Because it’s so bright and easy to see in the sky, Venus has played a role in popular culture since ancient times, inspiring writing and song.

It was called the most beautiful star in the sky by Homer, author of "The Iliad" and "The Odyssey" – two of the oldest and most important works in Greek literature.

More recently, Venus became a popular venue for 20th-century science fiction writers, including Edgar Rice Burroughs (“Pirates of Venus,” 1934); Arthur C. Clarke (“Before Eden,” 1961); and C.S. Lewis (“Perelandra,” 1943).

Australian author Shirley Hazzard won the 1980 National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction with her book, “The Transit of Venus,” about two orphaned sisters. American author John Gray used the planet and its masculine counterpart to explain relationships in his 1992 book “Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus.”

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