The Delaware Gazette

Venus reappears

That bril­liant “star” very low in the south­west in evening twi­light is Venus. You’ll need a clean west­ern hori­zon to see it. You’ll prob­a­bly need binoc­u­lars to see the elu­sive planet Mer­cury just below it.

As the bright­est object in the night­time sky besides the moon, the sun’s sec­ond planet is hard to miss. If it’s cloudy tonight, take heart. Venus will be vis­i­ble through the end of win­ter. As the days and weeks pass, it will be a bit higher every night.

Watch it slowly migrate to the west along the hori­zon. The ancient Greeks were at first a bit con­fused about the planet. Because Venus is closer to the sun than Earth, it always appears close to the sun and is thus vis­i­ble only in the evening just after the sun has set or in the morn­ing just before sun­rise. Because it appeared some­times in the morn­ing and some­times in the evening, the early Greeks thought it was two objects — Hes­pe­rus, the evening star, and Phos­pho­rus, the morn­ing star.

This time around, it’s the evening star. The Romans iden­ti­fied Venus as the god­dess of love and beauty, and it’s easy to see why. Few objects in the sky look so beau­ti­ful. My daugh­ter, who is a Latin scholar at SUNY Buf­falo, reminds me that the Roman god­dess — and hence the planet —was some­times called Hes­per, or Ves­per, which means evening. A holdover of that mean­ing can be found in the Catholic cel­e­bra­tion of Ves­pers, or evening prayers.

Astronomers used to think that Venus was Earth’s twin sis­ter. At about 8,000 miles wide, the planet is about the same size as Earth. At 67 mil­lion miles from the sun, it’s only 25 mil­lion miles closer than our planet.

How­ever, despite the sim­i­lar­i­ties, we’ll find no life on Venus. Venus turns out to be Earth’s evil twin. The prob­lem is its atmos­phere, which is mostly a very thick layer of car­bon diox­ide cov­ered over com­pletely with sulfuric-acid clouds. The air pres­sure is so great that an unwary astro­naut who landed there would be crushed flat like a bug under a heavy atmos­pheric boot.

The clouds let in only about 2 per­cent of the sun’s light, which sug­gests that Venus should be cold, despite its prox­im­ity to the sun. The trou­ble is that the dense atmos­phere is very effi­cient at trap­ping the heat from the sun’s fee­ble rays.

On Venus we find an out-of-control green­house effect with tem­per­a­tures of 900 degrees Fahren­heit every­where on its sur­face. You wouldn’t want to visit a planet where sul­fur lies in molten, steam­ing pools on the ground. The weird­ness doesn’t end there. Venus has the slow­est rate of rota­tion in the solar sys­tem. Our planet turns once on its axis every 24 hours. Venus rotates once every 5,832 hours, or once every 232 Earth days. A Venus year — the time it takes to make one rev­o­lu­tion around the sun — is only 225 days long. A Venus day is thus seven Earth days longer than its year!

Day­time on Earth begins as the sun rises in the east and ends when it sets in the west, a phe­nom­e­non caused by the Earth’s west-to-east rota­tion. Venus rotates in the oppo­site direc­tion, i.e., from east to west. On Venus, the sun rises in the west and sets in the east.

The myth­i­cal inhab­i­tants of Venus would think it per­fectly nat­ural to see the sun ris­ing in the west. They would have a harder time with the high tem­per­a­tures and atmos­pheric pres­sure. The gen­tle sulfuric-acid rain would be a major inconvenience.

But the worst thing about liv­ing on Venus would be the clouds. Imag­ine the sun as a fee­ble red orb, Earth and all the plan­ets blocked by the unvary­ing cloud cover. Imag­ine a sky with­out the beau­ti­ful con­stel­la­tions or the galax­ies of stars. Imag­ine a civ­i­liza­tion with no sense at all of the vast uni­verse that sur­rounds it, its imag­i­na­tion lim­ited to the pal­try con­fines of its tiny planet.

We’ll find no life at all on Venus. Thank good­ness for that.

Tom Burns is direc­tor of Ohio Wes­leyan University’s Perkins Obser­va­tory in Delaware, Ohio. He can be reached at tlburns@owu.edu.

Tom Burns Posted by on Oct 30 2011. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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