LiveScience Topic:
Venus

Find out everything there is to know about Venus and stay updated on the latest planet news with the comprehensive articles, interactive features and Venus pictures at LiveScience.com. Learn more about this terrestrial planet as scientists continue to make amazing discoveries about Venus.

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Scientists are unsure why Venus' vortex evolves...
The European Space Agency will send its Mars Ex...
Scientists have discovered strange magnetic rop...
What to look for in the night sky this holiday season.
The Akatsuki spacecraft may be able to bounce back from a 2010 orbit-insertion failure.
NASA's Mariner 2 probe flew within 21,500 miles of Venus on Dec. 14, 1962.
A waning crescent moon will glow alongside the brightest of all the planets.
False-colour image of cloud features seen on Venus by the Venus Monitoring Camera (VMC) on Venus Express.
The discovery comes from observations made by two Venus-observing probes over the course of three decades.
Titan's glow works a little like a neon sign.
The two brightest objects in the sky may be visible as you wait for your train or bus.
Part of Venus' atmosphere may be cold enough to form carbon dioxide snow.
Researchers may be able to use this information to learn more about comets' paths around the sun.
A number of night sky superlatives are overhead now.
On June 5, 2012, Hinode captured this stunning view of the transit of Venus -- the last instance of this rare phenomenon until 2117.
On June 5-6 2012, SDO is collecting images of one of the rarest predictable solar events: the transit of Venus across the face of the sun.
Venus' stripes, its quick-moving atmosphere and its vanished oceans are just some of its mysteries.
A breakdown of the nearly seven-hour event's major milestones.
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