Venus is sometimes called Earth's evil twin—the two planets have almost the same size and mass, but whereas Earth is ...
Billions of years ago, Venus may have harbored as much water as Earth. Today, almost all of it has disappeared. A new study may help to explain why. Planetary scientists at the University of ...
Venus could be shedding water to space at a much faster rate than previously thought. That is the conclusion of researchers in the US, who have identified a mechanism in the Venusian ionosphere that ...
(NASA) – Direct geological evidence of recent volcanic activity on Venus has been observed for a second time. Scientists in Italy analyzed archival data from NASA’s Magellan mission to reveal surface ...
Venus lost most of its water due to thermal and non-thermal processes, with new research suggesting a crucial advance.
VERITAS mission will discover the secrets of a lost habitable world on Venus, gathering data to reveal how the paths of Earth ...
The exoplanet could have two very different types of atmospheric setups. An Earth-like atmosphere made up of oxygen, nitrogen ...
Venus today is dry thanks to water loss to space as atomic hydrogen. In the dominant loss process, an HCO+ ion recombines with an electron, producing speedy H atoms (orange) that use CO molecules ...
(Nanowerk News) Planetary scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder have discovered how Venus, Earth’s scalding and uninhabitable neighbor, became so dry. The new study fills in a big gap ...
Using observations by NASA's TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite) and many other facilities, two international teams ...