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Mass (kg)............................................4.87 x 10^24
Diameter (km)........................................12104
Mean density (kg/m^3) ...............................5250
Escape velocity (m/sec)..............................10400
Average distance from Sun (AU).......................0.723
Rotation period (length of day in Earth days)........243.0 (retrograde)
Revolution period (length of year in Earth days).....224.7
Obliquity (tilt of axis degrees).....................178
Orbit inclination (degrees)..........................3.39
Orbit eccentricity (deviation from circular).........0.007
Mean surface temperature (K).........................726
Visual geometric albedo (reflectivity)...............0.59
Highest point on surface.............................Maxwell Montes
(17 km above mean planetary radius)
Atmospheric components...............................96% carbon dioxide,
3% nitrogen,
0.1% water vapor
Surface materials....................................basaltic rock and
altered materials
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The bluish hue of Venus is an effect of the colorization technique used to enhance subtle contrasts in cloud patterns and indicates that this image was taken through a violet filter. Features in the sulfuric acid clouds near the top of the planet's atmosphere are most prominent in violet and ultraviolet light. This image shows the east to west cloud banding and the brighter polar hoods . The features are embedded in winds that flow from east to west at about 370 kph (230 mph).
Three large impact craters with diameters ranging from 37 km (23 mi) to 65 km (40 mi) are visible in the fractured plains. Features typical of meteorite impact craters are also visible. Rough radar-bright ejecta surrounds the perimeter of the craters; terraced inner walls and large central peaks can be seen. Crater floors appear dark because they are smooth and have been flooded by lava. Domes of probable volcanic origin can be seen in the southeastern corner. The domes range in diameter from 1-12 km (0.6-7 mi); some have central pits typical of volcanic shields or cones.
Located along the left central edge of the image is a cluster of volcanic domes that ranges from 1.5 km (1 mi) to 7.5 km in diameter (5 mi). The domes and their deposits are located at the convergence of radar-bright lineaments that are interpreted to be faults and troughs. In some places the domes overlie the faults. The faults and troughs extend into the lower part of the image where they terminate against dark plains deposits and are crosscut at right angles by additional faults. The relationship between these features indicates that multiple episodes of faulting and volcanism have occurred.
The tectonic fabric of this region of Ovda Regio trends predominantly east-west. The large radar-dark areas are probably tectonically formed basins that have been filled in by fluid lava flows, thus presenting a smooth surface to the Magellan radar system.
On this bright, lineated terrain Alpha Regio is a series of troughs, ridges, and faults running in every direction. The lengths of these features range from 10 km (6.3 mi) to 60 km (37 mi). The elevation of Alpha Regio varies over a range of 4 km (2.5 mi). Low-lying areas appear dark in the radar images and may be filled with lava. Volcanoes appear as bright spots on the smooth plains. Notice the large volcano in the upper right. At the center of this 35 km (22 mi) volcano is a caldera; its western edge appears to be either a debris flow or a lava flow. The black square represents missing data.
Several tectonic events formed this complex terrain, which is part of the interior of Ovda Regio. An underlying fabric of ridges and valleys lies NE-SW. These ridges are spaced 10-20 km (6-12 mi) apart and may have been caused by compression of the crust at right angles to the ridge. The ridges are cut by bright features extending NW-SE. The largest valleys, particularly the 20 km (12 mi) wide valley extending across the image, were filled with dark material, probably lava. The complexity of Ovda Regio attests to a long history of tectonic deformation.
Lava flows blanket the flat plains region of eastern Lakshmi. The dark flows most likely represent smooth flows similar to pahoehoe flows on Earth, while the brighter areas are rougher flows resembling Earth's aa flows. Three dark splotches mark the tops of these lava flows. Because of the thick atmosphere surrounding Venus, small impactors break up before they hit the surface. The fragments are deposited over the surface and produce the dark splotches seen here. Notice the splotch on the far right has a crater at its center, indicating that the impactor was not completely destroyed.
This mosaic highlights a system of east-trending, radar-bright and dark lava flows that collide with and breach a north-trending ridge belt (left of center). Upon breaching the ridge belt, the lava pooled, forming a radar-bright deposit approximately 100,000 square km (right side of image). The source of the lava is the Corona Derceto, which lies about 300 km (186 mi) west of the scene. The bright and dark bars extending from top to bottom are artifacts of image processing.
Two large oval features can be seen in this image of Fortuna. On the left is Ba'het Patera, 230 km (138 mi) long and 150 km (90 mi) across. A portion of Onatah Corona, over 350 km (210 mi) in diameter, is visible on the right. Both features are surrounded by a ring of ridges and troughs. The central areas of the coronae contain radial fractures as well as volcanic domes and flows. Coronae may form due to the upwelling of hot material from deep in the interior of Venus. These two coronae may have formed at the same time over a single upwelling. The black strip represents missing data.
The bright area running from the upper right to the lower left may be part of a belt of ridges formed by compression and thickening of the upper layers of the planet. The area between the ridges suggests flooding by lava flows. The varied textures of the lava can be seen in the mottled appearance of the plains, which have been cut by the ridges; brighter, rougher flows are also quite common. The lighter area in the lower right corner is the northern extension of Mylitta Fluctus. The black strip represents missing data.
Named by the Soviets for their spider and cobweb-like appearance, arachnoids are one of the more remarkable features found on Venus. They are 50 to 230 km (30 to 138 mi) diameter circular structures, with a central volcanic feature surrounded by a complex network of fractures. Arachnoids are similar in form but generally smaller than coronae. The radar- bright lines extending for many kilometers beyond the arachnoids may have been caused by an upwelling of magma from the interior of Venus, which pushed up the surface to form cracks.
Located in Lada Terra, Selu Corona measures 350 km (210 mi) in diameter. Coronae are circular to elliptical features marked by a ring of concentric ridges, and are thought to result from the flow of heat in the planet's interior. As hot material rises, it weakens the upper layers of the crust, causing the surface to dome upwards. Then as the region cools, the dome begins to subside. As the upper layers rise and fall, they are subjected to stresses that crack the surface, creating both circular and radial fractures. The black strips represent missing data.
This region, roughly 100 km (60 mi) on a side, shows a gigantic structure known as a corona. Such features are thought to be the result of hot rising bodies of magma that reach the crust, and cause it to partially melt and collapse, generating volcanic flows and fault patterns that radiate from the central structure. Magellan acquired this view of Venus during its first mapping cycle around the planet in 1990 and 1991.
Sacajawea Patera is a huge caldera located in western Ishtar Terra. It measures approximately 233 km (140 mi) wide at its base, 1-2 km (0.6 -1.2 mi) deep and 120 by 215 km (74 by 133 mi) in diameter. The caldera is bounded by a zone of graben and fault scarps. Extending up to 140 km (87 mi) in length from the southeast of Sacajawea is a system of linear structures thought to be a flanking rift zone along which the lateral injection and eruption of magma may have occurred.
Seven circular domes can be seen on the eastern edge of Alpha Regio. They average 25 km (15 mi) in diameter with maximum heights of 750 m (2475 ft). Some scientists believe they are the result of eruptions of thick lava that flowed from a vent on level ground, resulting in an even lateral pattern of lava. The concentric and radial fracture pattern on the surface of the domes suggests that lava welled up inside the domes, causing the surface to stretch.
Scientists nicknamed this type of volcano a tick. About 66 km (41 mi) across at the base, this volcano has a flat, concave summit 35 km (22 mi) in diameter. The sides of the volcano are characterized by radiating ridges and valleys. To the west, the rim of the volcano appears to have been breached by dark lava flows that emanated from a shallow summit pit (5.4 km/3.3 mi in diameter) and traveled west along a channel. The black square represents missing data.
The Danu Mountains bound Lakshmi Planum to the south. Because of the steep slopes, the local relief in the area (2-3 km/1-2 mi), and the effects of radar geometry, the fault- bounded troughs appear to zigzag through the area when in reality, they are likely straight when viewed from above. The large volcanic dome is 20 km (12 mi) in diameter and was deformed when the Danu Mountains were created.
Towering 4 km (3 mi) above the surface in NW Eistla Regio is the shield volcano
Gula Mons. This type of volcano is similar to those found on the Hawaiian
Islands; possibly resulting from hot material rising from the interior and
heating the crust. Shield volcanoes form when hot, fluid lava erupts non-
explosively. The radar-bright area in Eistla Regio consists of both the summit
and radial troughs and scarps extending to the northeast down the slope of Gula
Mons. Regional expansion of the crust is obvious in this area because of the
presence of
This is a Magellan image of Crater Golubkina. The 30 km- (18 mi-) diameter
crater is characterized by terraced inner walls and a central peak, typical of
large impact craters on the Earth, Moon and Mars. The terraced inner walls take
shape late in the formation of an impact crater, due to the collapse of the
initial cavity created by the meteorite impact. The central peak forms due to
the rebound of the inner crater floor. This crater is named after the Russian
sculptor Anna Golubkina.
This is a computer generated, perspective view of Crater Golubkina. Vertical
exaggeration in this image is about 20 times.
Crater Mead is the largest known crater on Venus. Named after Margaret Mead,
the American anthropologist, it measures 280 km (168 mi) in diameter and is
located north of Aphrodite Terra and east of Eistla Regio. Classified as a
multi-ring crater, Mead's innermost ring is thought to be the rim of the
original crater cavity. The presence of irregular, radar-bright crater ejecta
crossing the radar-dark floor terrace and adjacent outer radar-bright ring
suggests that the terrace floor region is likely down-dropped and tilted
outward, forming a concentric ring-fault.
This remarkable half crater called Balch is located in the rift between Rhea
and Theia Montes in Beta Regio. (Radar illumination is from the left. ) About
37 km (23 mi) in diameter, Balch has been cut by many fractures or faults since
it was formed by the impact of a large meteorite. The eastern portion was
partially destroyed during the formation of a fault-valley, which measures up
to 20 km (12 mi) wide. A north-south profile through the center of this crater
resulted from the downdropping and removal of most of the eastern half of the
crater.
The Akna Mountains form the western edge of Lakshmi Planum. Wanda, the giant
crater on the upper right, has a diameter of 18 km (11 mi). While Wanda doesn't
appear to have been deformed by tectonics, material from the Akna Mountains
appears to have collapsed into it. The area represented by this image is about
200 km (124 mi) long by 125 km (78 mi) wide.
Magellan's radar system detected few impact craters in the process of being
resurfaced by volcanism. Alcott is the largest of these craters in transition,
with a diameter of 63 km (39 mi). The trough-like depression (lower left) is a
rille through which lava once flowed. A remnant of rough radial ejecta is
preserved outside the crater's southeast rim. The presence of partially
lava-flooded craters such as this is important to our understanding of the rate
of resurfacing on Venus by volcanism.
This 54-km (32-mi) diameter crater is the size at which craters on Venus begin
to possess peak-rings instead of a single central peak. The floor of Barton
crater is flat and radar-dark, indicating possible infilling by lava flows
sometime following the impact. Barton's central peak-ring is discontinuous and
appears to have been disrupted or separated during or following the cratering
process. The name Barton has been proposed by the Magellan Science Team, after
Clara Barton, founder of the U. S. Red Cross; the name is tentative pending
approval by the IAU.
Impact craters such as Crater Carson shown here are frequently surrounded by
radar-dark halos. Several of these special craters have halos that are
parabolic in shape and are very long, extending hundreds of kilometers to the
west. The darkness of the emissivity data indicates a smooth surface, leading
scientists to believe that halos may be thick, smooth sediment deposits formed
when incoming projectiles crashed into the surface. The black strips represent
missing data.
A large impact crater about 30 km (19 mi) in diameter is surrounded by a fresh
ejecta blanket. The extreme brightness of the blanket is due to its roughness
and its ability to scatter the radar signals that are used to collect these
images. Scientists believe that the missing section of the ejecta blanket is
due to an atmospheric blast that followed the impactor as it crashed through
the Venusian atmosphere.
This long open channel in Vires-Akka Chasma ranges in width from under 1 km
(3300 ft) to 4 km (2 mi). The portion of the channel visible here is over 120
km (72 mi) long. Scour lines are visible along the length of the channel,
particularly where it makes abrupt turns. The channel may have been carved by
very fluid lava that remained liquid as it flowed over great distances due to
the extreme surface temperatures. Because the lava remained fluid it eroded
preexisting terrain along its path.
The large fault-bounded trough in the center of the image was nicknamed Gumby
(after an animated cartoon figure) by Magellan scientists. Located in the
Lavinia region at the intersection of two tectonic trends, Gumby measures 5 km
(3 mi) wide and 100-200 m (.06 - .1 mi) deep. An example of one of the trends
is the bright lines running E-W through Gumby's head. A second example is the
bright lines running SW to NE through Gumby's legs and hips. The line of pits
(by Gumby's elbow) suggests some igneous or volcanic activity may have
accompanied the faulting.
In a region near Hestia Rupes on the NW corner of Aphrodite Terra lies a
complex network of narrow (<1 km) bright channels. This network exhibits
tributary-like branches similar to those observed in river systems on Earth.
However, the angular intersections of these tributaries suggest control by
faulting. The tributaries may be due to drainage of lava along preexisting
fractures. The main tectonic fabric of this region can be observed in the NE-SW
trending ridges.
This pair of images shows a region in Aphrodite Terra. The left image was taken
in November 1990 and the right image in July 1991. In the center of the right
image lies a bright, flow-like area extending to the left of a bright fracture.
When the bright rough area appeared, the fracture seemed to change position
from when the image on the left was taken. Some scientists thought a
"Venusquake" had occurred, causing a landslide (the bright area) to form. Later
analyses indicated that the apparent changes in the surface were due to
differences in radar illumination.
In northern Navka, radar-dark wind streaks have been blown across radar-dark
lava flows, indicating a SE-NW wind direction. The darkness of the streaks
indicates they are composed of small, fine-grained material that is too smooth
to return a strong radar signal. The radar-dark lava flows beneath the streaks
are dark because they are smoother than the rougher, radar-bright lava flows to
the left. Because the streaks are associated with lava flows, they may be
composed of fine ash from the volcanic eruption that produced the flows.
Spectacular wind streaks were found NE of Crater Mead. The powerful impact that
created Mead spread debris 500 km (310 mi) onto the surrounding plains. The
radar-bright streaks in this image most likely represent debris from the impact
that have been modified by surface winds blowing from northwest to southeast.
The radar-bright material is on top of an older, darker terrain.
The comet-like tail lying northeast of this volcano is a relatively
radar-bright deposit. The streak is 35 km (22 mi) long and 10 km (6 mi) wide.
The volcano, whose diameter is 5 km (3 mi), blocks the wind so that particles
in the atmosphere settle downwind from it.
Two groups of parallel features that intersect almost at right angles are
visible. The regularity of this terrain caused scientists to nickname it "graph
paper" terrain. The fainter lineations are spaced at intervals of about 1 km
(.6 mi) and extend beyond the boundaries of the image. The brighter, more
dominant lineations are less regular and often appear to begin and end where
they intersect the fainter lineations. It is not yet clear whether the two sets
of lineations represent faults or fractures, but in areas outside the image,
the bright lineations are associated with pit craters and other volcanic
features.
The southern scarp and basin province of western Ishtar Terra are portrayed in
this vertically exaggerated 3-dimensional perspective view. Western Ishtar
Terra is about the size of Australia and is a major focus of Magellan
investigations. The highland terrain is centered on a 2.5 km to 4 km-high (1.5
mi to 2.5 mi-high) plateau, Lakshmi Planum, which can be seen in the distance
at the right. Here, the surface of the plateau drops precipitously into the
bounding lowlands. Vertical exaggeration in this image is about 20 times.
Located on the slopes of Sif Mons, this area displays a simple sequence of
events. The small shield volcanoes, features commonly found on Earth, are no
more than 5 km (3 mi) in diameter. The dark background plains and the shield
volcanoes both formed from the eruption of very fluid lava. Over time, several
layers of lava flows covered each other, each one successively brighter,
indicating that they became blockier in texture over time. The summits of the
shield volcanoes protrude from the flows. Once the lava flows were in place,
fractures formed as the new surface expanded.
This false-color view of the volcano Sif Mons was generated from Magellan SAR
data and existing altimetry data. The image shows a region of the volcano just
below the summit of the peak. A series of bright and dark lava flows is visible
in the foreground. The brightest flows, which are relatively rough, are
associated with the most recent volcanism in the region. The flows overlay
older lava flows which are smoother and hence appear darker to the Magellan
radar system. The volcano is 2 km (1.2 mi) high and 200 km (120 mi) in
diameter. Vertical exaggeration in this image is about 20 times.
Located in the Atla Regio region of Venus is Sapas Mons. The sides of the
volcano are covered with numerous overlapping lava flows, many of which appear
to have originated along the sides of the volcano rather than from its double
summit. This type of eruption is common of large shield volcanoes on Earth,
such as those found in Hawaii. Color was artificially added to this image and
is based on the colors that the Soviet Venera 13 and 14 spacecraft observed in
the 1970s.
Golubkina
Crater Perspective
Largest Crater
Half Crater
Akna Mountains
Craters in Transition
Peak-ring Crater
Dark Halos
Large Impact Crater
Long Channel
Fault-Bounded Troughs
Tributary-Like Branches
Radar Bright
Ash on Lava
Wind Streaks
Crater with Streak
Parallel Lines
Lakshmi Planum
Sif Mons
Recent Volcanism
Twin Summit