Once there was water, now this planet “vlon” at 420 degrees Celsius

Venera today is a desert with temperatures above 400 degrees Celsius. If you wanted to look for water somewhere in our solar system, then this would be the last place you would do that. However, research indicates that Venera once was the planet that had mostly water. In fact, [...]
Venera today is a desert with temperatures above 400 degrees Celsius.
If you wanted to look for water somewhere in our solar system, then this would be the last place you would do that.
However, research indicates that Venera once was the planet that had mostly water.
In fact, the group of scientists from the University of Paris has simulated through the path of computer models the way Venera evolved during the different times and situations in which it has passed, KosovoPress broadcasts.
Thanks to the slow rotation, almost 116 times slower than Earth and in combination with the corresponding amount of carbon dioxide that exists on the planet today, it has been found that Venera once had conditions to welcome “a large shallow ocean.
Scientists say that there would be a need for a thick layer of clouds to cool the surface of the planet so that the ocean could exist.
The study is based on earlier data on how the planet is formed, and as tectonic activities have led to extreme heat, which today rules there.
Simulations indicate that Venera has needed only 30 percent of the earth's water supply and that most of its surface is covered with thin soil.
Researchers mention this only as the theory for which more facts are found and agree that the best case would be the planned mission of the 2024 Russian cosmic program.











