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The Information Architects of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Venus is the second planet from the Sun and sixth in the solar system in size and mass. When Venus is visible, it is the most brilliant planet in the sky.
Facts
Size (Mean Radius)
6,051.8 km (3,760.4 miles)
Mean Distance From The Sun
108 million km (67 million miles)
Period Of Orbit
224.7 Earth days
Atmospheric Composition
carbon dioxide, 96%; molecular nitrogen, 3.5%; water, 0.02%; trace quantities of carbon monoxide, molecular oxygen, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen chloride, and other gases
Mean Surface Temperature
737 K (867 °F, 464 °C)
Number Of Known Moons
none
Top Questions
Why is Venus called Earth's sister?
Venus has been called Earth’s twin or sister because of the similarities in their masses, sizes, and densities and their similar relative locations in the solar system. Because they presumably formed in the solar nebula from the same kind of rocky planetary building blocks, they also likely have similar overall chemical compositions. However, Venus and Earth have evolved surface conditions that could hardly be more different. Venus is extremely hot, dry, and in other ways so forbidding that it is improbable that life as it is understood on Earth could have developed there.
How long is a year on Venus?
The period of Venus's orbit—that is, the length of the Venusian year—is 224.7 Earth days.
Did You Know?
Venus spins very slowly, taking about 243 Earth days to complete one rotation with respect to the stars—the length of its sidereal day.
Venus’s easy visibility from Earth allowed it to become one of the earliest identified planets.
Venus's modern name comes from the Roman goddess of love and beauty (the Greek equivalent being Aphrodite), perhaps because of the planet’s luminous jewel-like appearance.