News

Venus' stormy atmosphere acts like a brake on its rotation. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. Venus' dense and stormy ...
Japan’s Himawari weather satellites, designed to watch Earth, have quietly delivered a decade of infrared snapshots of Venus.
How can scientists study the meteorology of Venus from Earth since there are currently no missions to Venus? This is what a ...
Scientists discovered unexpected images of Venus in the background of Earth's weather satellite photos, enabling them to ...
The potential discovery of phosphine in Venus's atmosphere last year made headlines around the world. On Earth, phosphine is produced by living things.
“Venus’s atmosphere holds the chemical clues to understanding a whole host of aspects of that planet, including what its starting composition was and how its climate has evolved through time ...
Venus's atmosphere rotates 60 times faster than the planet does, and now scientists from the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science have figured out why. Skip to main content.
Scientists have spotted two gases in Venus's atmosphere that may be the fingerprints of life on our hostile neighbor. Phosphine gas and ammonia gas have been detected in the planet's thick, hot ...
Venus’s atmosphere shows potential signs of life Venus’s atmosphere shows potential signs of life. By Paola Rosa-Aquino. Three ways scientists could search for life on Venus Three ways ...
Because Venus was between Earth and the sun, we could only see the night side of the planet -- but around the edges, where the team was observing the atmosphere, is the edge between night and day ...
The Venus atmosphere is full of substances that easily evaporate, called volatiles. These include noble gases and compounds including nitrogen, hydrogen, carbon, and sulfur.
Ammonia on Venus could be causing milder-than-expected acidity high in the planet's atmosphere, according to a new model.