Venus lost most of its water due to thermal and non-thermal processes, with new research suggesting a crucial advance.
Scientists have identified a water-loss mechanism on Venus that could explain how the once water-rich world became completely parched. In the newly identified process, linked to a previously ...
Scientists have found signs of fresh flowing lava on Venus in decades-old data from NASA's Magellan spacecraft ...
Astronomers have again discovered evidence of recent volcanic activity on Earth's sister planet in data from the 1990s ...
NASA’s spacecraft Magellan used cloud-penetrating radar to survey most of the planet. But back then, the relatively ...
The surface of Venus is littered with thousands of volcanoes, some of which may still be active until today. A fresh look at ...
In a recent study, published in Nature Astronomy, a group of planetary scientists at Università degli Studi "G. d'Annunzio" in Pescara, Italy and Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza" in Rome, ...
A new analysis of data collected on Venus more than 30 years ago suggests the planet may currently be volcanically active.
Astronomers have made the rare and tantalizing discovery of an Earth-like exoplanet 40 light-years away that may be just a ...
VERITAS mission will discover the secrets of a lost habitable world on Venus, gathering data to reveal how the paths of Earth ...
Venus, known as a scorching wasteland of a planet, may have once had tectonic plate movements simil… ...
The exoplanet could have two very different types of atmospheric setups. An Earth-like atmosphere made up of oxygen, nitrogen ...