The Final Real Images Of Venus - What Have We Found?

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 6 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 342

  • @Boyso5407
    @Boyso5407 Рік тому +229

    I still think the Russians landing Venera-13 on Venus back in 1982 is one of the greatest scientific achievements of all time. The fact that it was able to survive for 2 hours in that environment and take pictures is absolutely incredible

    • @gamingclipz7309
      @gamingclipz7309 Рік тому

      Ya name the only good thing Russia has done…

    • @TheZilfer25
      @TheZilfer25 Рік тому +5

      Pretty there is a video of it too here on UA-cam

    • @DaDaDo661
      @DaDaDo661 Рік тому +17

      I think only the Russians at that time could do what they did. A lot of cold war Soviet stuff might not have been pretty, but was made with durability for n mind

    • @nealsmall9316
      @nealsmall9316 Рік тому +3

      ​@@DaDaDo661I remember a couple years ago I looked up if Venus can support life and google said it's so hot it's the analog to Hell

    • @whynottalklikeapirat
      @whynottalklikeapirat Рік тому +3

      I guess Russia aged badly

  • @timothyrogers5897
    @timothyrogers5897 Рік тому +30

    This is an excellent video with the perfect balance of science and plain spoken English. So much fascinating information in a short video. Well done!

    • @Jah_Rastafari_ORIG
      @Jah_Rastafari_ORIG Рік тому +1

      @Timothy Rogers Well, except for mispronouncing 'vulcanism'...

    • @nealsmall9316
      @nealsmall9316 7 місяців тому

      @@Jah_Rastafari_ORIG IF NASA tries to contact UFOs do you think they would kill us ?

  • @annehaight9963
    @annehaight9963 Рік тому +15

    My father always speculated that something big passing through the solar system disturbed Venus so violently that it reversed rotational direction, which explains not only the retrograde direction but the slowness of it. He wondered also if that same disturbance, or one like it, was responsible for removing most of Mars's atmosphere, since our science suggests that Mars should have a much denser atmosphere than it does.
    This new discovery is consistent with my dad's theory -- a gravitational disturbance so great that it may have ignited tectonic instability in the planet which is still going on.

    • @khalilweatherspoon2218
      @khalilweatherspoon2218 10 місяців тому +1

      we need your dad in a lab rn like rn rn

    • @annehaight9963
      @annehaight9963 10 місяців тому

      @@khalilweatherspoon2218 Unfortunately he died about 13 years ago, but he was a legit genius. Astronomy wasn't even his profession. He was a mechanical engineer.

    • @chocolate_maned_wolf
      @chocolate_maned_wolf 6 місяців тому

      @@annehaight9963he sounds like a great man. you should be proud, his efforts will outlive him

  • @drewlovelyhell4892
    @drewlovelyhell4892 Рік тому +17

    I wonder if had Venus not suffered the primordial impact that messed up it's rotation, if it might now be just a slightly warmer version of Earth. It's proximity to the sun doesn't account for it's extreme temperature. Even Mars at twice the distance from the sun as Earth, would likely be habitable if it was large enough to maintain it's magnetic field and hence, it's atmosphere. Really a shame, because Venus would be the perfect place to colonise and give us a backup planet.

    • @alexwoolridge94aw
      @alexwoolridge94aw Рік тому +1

      It would just give humans something else to fight over. Got plenty of that here on Earth. Best we just screw up one planet as opposed to another if Venus was habitable.

    • @donaldmackerer9032
      @donaldmackerer9032 Рік тому

      Yeah we would fight over parts of Venus but it would be worth to be able to colonize it providing that Venus didn't have a technological civilization already.

  • @piotrd.4850
    @piotrd.4850 Рік тому +12

    The mystery of Venus atmosphere seems simple, really. That's the default setting. Venus --unlike Earth - has no Moon despite comparable mass. Earth had taken monstrous hit early on, that had ripped enough material to form the Moon and also gases, which either escaped directly into space, or Moon was too weak to retain. In any case it is most unfortunate, that Mars and Venus haven't swapped places.

    • @kevinduffy6712
      @kevinduffy6712 Рік тому +2

      Yep and some thing disrupted the earth around 10,000 years ago!

    • @leotka
      @leotka Рік тому

      Venus more easily to terraform then Mars. Venus moon can be created artificially and excessive carbon dioxide can be removed and used for making oxigen and methane.

  • @bazpearce9993
    @bazpearce9993 Рік тому +27

    Venus is a tough planet to photgraph. Usually best to do it during the day when it's higer in the sky. The hardest part is finding the planet while the Sun is still up, but it can be done. :)

    • @zzzz-sf5lr
      @zzzz-sf5lr Рік тому +7

      I once saw Jupiter in the daytime it was insane

    • @lukegeekwalker2689
      @lukegeekwalker2689 Рік тому

      CGI

    • @renejean2523
      @renejean2523 Рік тому

      You can only see Venus around sunset or sunrise, and only when its to the left of the sun, or the right. You can never see it during the night or in the middle of the day.

    • @ois9
      @ois9 Рік тому +8

      Can you guys please stop taking pictures of us? It’s like we’re on display 5832/7.

    • @chocolate_maned_wolf
      @chocolate_maned_wolf 6 місяців тому

      @@zzzz-sf5lryou could see the rings with your naked eye or just a handheld binocular in the DAY???

  • @snufflehound
    @snufflehound Рік тому +8

    Great documentary on Venus. My only critique is that it is not always obvious which are real (either optical or radar derived) images vs CGI.

  • @turaabraza5185
    @turaabraza5185 Рік тому +4

    We often see an extreme brightened object near moon and start thinking it is star. No fellas, its not star, its third brightest object in our solar system after sun and moon called Venus.

  • @slangster233
    @slangster233 Рік тому +9

    Venus and Titan have more in common with each other than either does to any other Solar System object. Both certainly appear to be in the embryonic phase of planetary evolution.

    • @mgaeeeee9150
      @mgaeeeee9150 Рік тому +1

      Well except they're both in a shitty area of the solar system. Either too cold or too hot.

  • @carolynallisee2463
    @carolynallisee2463 Рік тому +7

    Thank you for this video! We get so little about Venus- I sometimes wonder if people were so disappointed that it wasn't the swampy watery world the SF writers of the 50's and early 60's thought it was, that they've kind of stuck it on the high shelf, whilst the more promising worlds of Mars and Europa, and even Titan, got the lions share of attention.
    The fact that its now known Venus' many volcanoes may still be active does answer one mystery that perplexed scientists for some time, and allowed fringe elements to cook up some strange ideas. Even taking into account that erosion ( chemical or otherwise) of both landscape and impact objects prior to impact would have an effect, the surface of Venus, or certainly, large sections of it, were remarkably devoid of impact craters, so much so that ideas like ' Crustal overturn' flourished. Now it is clear that the lack of impact craters may be due to the fact that eroded or not, they have simply been buried under flows of lava and other volcanic products, instead of being engulfed in some strange resurfacing event!

  • @walterhoenig6569
    @walterhoenig6569 Рік тому +5

    We should create huge solar panels that eclipse Venus

    • @donaldmackerer9032
      @donaldmackerer9032 Рік тому

      There have been papers suggesting that we put a big shade over Venus for a couple of years too rapidly cool down the planet

  • @scottmintz7493
    @scottmintz7493 Рік тому +20

    The Soviet Union was the first country to photograph Venus on March 1, 1966.

    • @donaldmackerer9032
      @donaldmackerer9032 Рік тому

      That is old news. Most people know that already except maybe for the date.

  • @Eurowefilms421
    @Eurowefilms421 Рік тому +2

    Very enlightening, lovely presentation & perfect narration, congratulations & thanks.

  • @debbiekern2841
    @debbiekern2841 Рік тому +8

    How do they know that Venus isn't still evolving? Present day Venus could be a mirror of earth's past. Earth could be what Venus will eventually look like.

    • @carlwheezerofsouls3273
      @carlwheezerofsouls3273 Рік тому +3

      i dont think anyone really said it stopped evolving, it totally is, like every other planet, actively changing over tme.

    • @RISERefuge
      @RISERefuge Рік тому

      Our Sun got fiercer, now it is slowly fading. It's about cycles.

    • @Palimbacchius
      @Palimbacchius Рік тому

      You're confusing mere change with evolution.

  • @cory4163
    @cory4163 Рік тому +2

    We need more pictures of mercury and uranus. They are very underrated planets

  • @John4gamesyo
    @John4gamesyo Рік тому +10

    if venus was closer to earths orbit, venus would probably be a habitable planet. Without gravital interferences of course.

    • @Berndr
      @Berndr Рік тому

      No, it would not be, Venus is still in a habitable zone, Venus is not a hell planet just due to its proximity to the sun, it has more to do with its atmosphere ... That distance from the Sun is fine as long as the planet's ozone works and there are no greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere to trap the heat! Earth could also turn into Venus if we continue to pollute by pumping CO2 into the air! That's what climate warming is about!

    • @iamtheiceman
      @iamtheiceman Рік тому

      I often wondered about this.
      Just how close could the other planets be - to earth - without negatively affecting each other's orbits, etc.
      If Venus was only half as far away from earth as it is today.
      If Mars was only half as far away from earth as it is today.
      Would they be (too close) and cause a catastrophe ?

    • @AlgaeEater09
      @AlgaeEater09 Рік тому

      @@iamtheiceman Mars wouldnt matter. Mars is dead no matter how close or far away it is. Mainly because the planet is too small, so the inner cool has already cooled too much for it to fuel the planet with energy and life. The innercore no longer generates an electromagnetic field, blocking the suns radiation. Even if it was where earth was.. the suns radiation would have 100% killed off any chance of life on mars. And the planets too small to sustain an atmosphere.
      Venus has WAY more a chance than Mars does. The only thing stopping venus is it's greenhouse effect. The theory is that Venus WAS in the habitual zone when our galaxy first started out because the sun was much dimmer. Venus is theorized to of had oceans and plantlife, but it's greenhouse effect (similar to global warming) has overtaken it.

    • @randyatha2703
      @randyatha2703 Рік тому

      I don't think Venus has a magnetic feild

    • @John4gamesyo
      @John4gamesyo Рік тому +1

      @@randyatha2703that is a interesting topic, i also realized it doesn't have tectonic plates

  • @sinebar
    @sinebar Рік тому +2

    We are so incredibly lucky.

  • @banestar
    @banestar Рік тому +2

    Man, I have to know where you get your fantastic background music from. It is that perfect non-intrusive awe-inspiring music like what is found in the Mass Effect game series. It's wonderful.

  • @Jacob66998
    @Jacob66998 9 місяців тому +1

    i love his voice

  • @DeBanked
    @DeBanked Рік тому +10

    Such a brilliant video ❤

  • @gummybear777
    @gummybear777 Рік тому +12

    Imagine if there was life on other planets and they made it uninhabitable and destroyed it like what we are doing to earth

    • @marktwain2053
      @marktwain2053 Рік тому +3

      Imagine if you believed everything you were told by grifters, it boggles the mind.

    • @gummybear777
      @gummybear777 Рік тому +5

      @@marktwain2053
      Lol you are hilarious!

    • @powerzx
      @powerzx Рік тому +1

      1)We don't destroy our planet.
      2)Venus was hit by a very large body (the size of the planet Mars) not so long ago.
      It is the reason why it is still so hot and rotate in a different direction than all celestial bodies in the Solar System.

    • @guymontag349
      @guymontag349 Рік тому +5

      @@powerzx And your evidence for this is…?

    • @powerzx
      @powerzx Рік тому +1

      @@guymontag349 For what?

  • @jeremiahmauricio5377
    @jeremiahmauricio5377 Рік тому

    The temperature of Venus is related to the atmosphere and the proximity to the sun, but not for the reason that most people believe the high temperature is mostly due to the extraordinarily high surface pressure and less atmospheric content. This is a commonly misunderstood factor and can be observed on Earth with changes in temperature due to minor air pressure reduction at higher altitudes. Consider desert environments with warm temperatures and lots of sun exposure but with snow at mountain tops. Here we are talking maybe a few psi of pressure changes but 10s of degrees difference.
    Now consider to 1350 psi surface pressures of Venus relative to the 15 psi sea level pressures on Earth. It is pretty easy to calculate the energy increase due to proximity, combined with the higher CO2 atmospheric absorption isn't enough to get the temperatures we see until you increase the per volume CO2 content due to the atmospheric pressures.
    If anyone doesn't mention the massive increase in CO2 content due to the pressures they are intentionally misleading you to point to the CO2 at all.
    It is some basic college physics to calculate the energy density, spectral energy, and CO2 spectral absorption and see that the energy difference isn't sufficient to get you close to the temperatures on Venus until you account for the air density and that becomes the major contributor.

  • @BriefCon1
    @BriefCon1 Рік тому

    Thanks for putting km and Celsius as well 👍

  • @ghiggs8389
    @ghiggs8389 Рік тому +4

    Would be amazing if we could tow Ceres to Venus to be its moon and see what happens then.

    • @donaldmackerer9032
      @donaldmackerer9032 Рік тому +1

      I often wondered about that, what would Venus be like if it had a moon like ours? How would it affect that planet?

  • @jeffmartin1026
    @jeffmartin1026 Рік тому +4

    Our clouds move faster than our own rotation here on Earth.

    • @kevinduffy6712
      @kevinduffy6712 Рік тому +3

      Its called the jet stream!, nothing sinister!

  • @VogtTD
    @VogtTD Рік тому

    This means something. This is important.

  • @benavraham4397
    @benavraham4397 Рік тому +2

    Fantastic video!

  • @Aussiemarco
    @Aussiemarco Рік тому

    It’s definitely true that the study of old data and images reveals new discoveries. I found some old photos of myself taken 40 years ago, when I was 19, and discovered I was much hotter than I thought I was at the time 🤔

  • @pj1708
    @pj1708 Рік тому +1

    Always expect a British guy when watching space videos. The country accent always catches me off guard lol

  • @Warriorking.1963
    @Warriorking.1963 Рік тому

    "Although conditions on Venus are harsh..."
    Surely that has to make the shortlist for understatement of the year? 🤣 Great video, really enjoyed that, and was totally unaware about the active volcanism on Venus.

  • @titolino73
    @titolino73 Рік тому +2

    The future of Earth

  • @trevoraldrinmatanjun8624
    @trevoraldrinmatanjun8624 Рік тому +7

    If you put same amount water from Earth to Venus . Can it cool down Venus ?

    • @brianfox771
      @brianfox771 Рік тому

      No, it would instantly evaporate, then likely react with other compounds in the upper atmosphere. You would, however, likely form a permanent layer of water vapor there that would continually cycle thru cloud formation, rain, evaporation, then back to clouds, but the rain would evaporate long before it touched the surface. But in the long term, it would likely heat the planet up further, as H_2O is a more potent greenhouse gas than CO_2. If you managed to cool Venus' atmosphere by a few 100 C, you would likely condense out a huge ocean of liquid carbon dioxide. Eventually, the entire surface could be covered by hundreds of meters of liquid CO_2.

    • @LagoonofMystery
      @LagoonofMystery Рік тому

      No. Venus can't be cooled like dousing a fire. Water in gaseous form is a greenhouse gas (albeit a weaker one) and would contribute to the heating of the planet. Ultimately, chemical reactions would convert the water into sufuric aid further adding to the problem. Terraforming Venus will be much more challenging than lobbing a few comets at it.

    • @scottsommers2453
      @scottsommers2453 Рік тому +1

      nope its too close to the sun

    • @IamSkyeOrion
      @IamSkyeOrion Рік тому +2

      No. Greenhouse gasses.

    • @jonathanbaincosmologyvideo3868
      @jonathanbaincosmologyvideo3868 Рік тому +1

      You got to fetch that water from one of Jupiter's moon's first, maybe catch a comet or two?
      Then breed massive amounts of microbes to gobble up all the greenhouse gasses.
      Bake for a few aeons, and
      te voilà
      a life world

  • @mayerkorchin-vv9vt
    @mayerkorchin-vv9vt Рік тому +1

    You don't hear too much about Venus now

  • @Flagsitta
    @Flagsitta Рік тому +7

    I’m confused. How are you getting an 8th? Because 33, 66, 99. And we’re measuring 67 against 93. How about a third? Ya’ know, math.

    • @krazy8ightz270
      @krazy8ightz270 Рік тому +2

      This was literally the only reason I checked the comments; to see if someone caught this. Good job!

    • @astraledge7178
      @astraledge7178 Рік тому

      I'm pretty sure this channel is an AI (bot)-generated script read by a human narrator. It's a shame these low-quality inauthentic videos are taking over the platform.

  • @lesliehenriques62
    @lesliehenriques62 Рік тому +3

    We are lost in time

  • @parazels83
    @parazels83 Рік тому +1

    Are there any science fiction movies about landing on Venus?

  • @oobrocks
    @oobrocks Рік тому

    I’ve seen several docs saying the fact Venus is much closer to the Sun isn’t important to it temperature. This doc is correct: obviously the previous docs are wrong. Btw: no possibility in my view, there’s life on Venus

  • @jonbutcher9805
    @jonbutcher9805 Рік тому +3

    Does Venus have it's own moon. Could be one factor as to why it acts so funky compared to the other inner rocky
    " Yo" planets. Plus who knows it may have been blasted by a huge sunward CME being so much closer to the angry sun. A blast so monumentally powerful but struck in such a way as to set spinning in the opposite direction, the CME not really hitting planet head on but just enough to set the winds spinning and spinning and more spinning faster and faster and faster still as it climbed forcing the actual planet no option but to follow the wind. Either that por superman used Venus to practice his time reversal trick to save louice. Then forgot to stop it. Duh superman.
    Anywho. Withthe winds and the planet suddenly out of whack it sets off mass geologic upheaval, fissues pumping co2 volcanic eruptions all over all or any water surface or otherwise and any vapor all mixed with volcanic gases producing sulfuric acid nitric acid plus a few more im sure al of which slowly whipped at lower level then building steam as higherlevel and faster winds keep hurling this poison faster and faster and with the sun constantly beating the atmosphere making it denser and denser and hotter and hotter so hot and dense tis almost like a barrier letting only small amounts of heat and junk to radiate away.
    I say there is little hope of change for venus unless another CME or superman remembers and get Venus spinning with the rest of us. Who knows this time may even slow down the clouds and cool the temps when volcanoes settle down. Planet is still f** ked but at least might be able to study planet side one day.
    My two cents on venus is now over Ta Da and good bye and a beer or Three.

    • @BigBand1942
      @BigBand1942 Рік тому

      Look up Valiant Thor...He's from VENUS! This video is just disinformation!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @kurtdeyoung2608
      @kurtdeyoung2608 Рік тому

      They say near the polls. It's about 60゚C which may be habitable and certain criteria and conditions are met. But you never hear much about it.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 Рік тому +3

    how does Venus keep its dense atmosphere from being blown away by solar winds like happens to Mars?

    • @nickl5658
      @nickl5658 Рік тому

      Higher gravity of Venus compare to Mars and higher mass of carbon dioxide and sulphuric acid compared to water and hydrogen.. .has allowed Venus to keep its carbon dioxide atmosphere from being stripped by solar winds. And yes, the solar wind has stripped Venus atmosphere of water... hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen.

    • @snufflehound
      @snufflehound Рік тому +1

      Higher gravity combined with much longer rotation period.

  • @anchorage9562
    @anchorage9562 Рік тому +7

    Is JW going to give us new photos on our own planets? I know its busy looking out as far as it can, but im sure it can make some awesome pictures of Venus.

  • @MukiBlalock-t9y
    @MukiBlalock-t9y 10 місяців тому

    Wow the Varitas

  • @gwugluud
    @gwugluud Рік тому +2

    THANK YOU for not giving the temperatures in "Kelvin"...whatever tf that is.

    • @chocolate_maned_wolf
      @chocolate_maned_wolf 6 місяців тому

      kelvin sucks for human comprehension, i get it, but it’s a thing because when you are comparing astronomical object temperatures it gets… inconvenient to compare millions and billions instead of just thousands places

  • @pattoneill2402
    @pattoneill2402 Рік тому +2

    Can Space Matter assure the viewers that all of the images in this video are actually OF Venus? I swear I saw the the recent eruption of an Iceland volcano. Not that I mind you using other images not of Venus, but you must label them as such to show scientific integrity and my respect for Space Matters as a real scientific channel.

  • @sandydennylives1392
    @sandydennylives1392 Рік тому +1

    Volcanoes on Venus. Talk about pillin' it on.

  • @plotholedetective4166
    @plotholedetective4166 Рік тому +52

    Didn't contain any actual pictures of Venus just computer generated pictures and the badly edited yellow photoshopped pictures....😢 Was hoping for some honesty

    • @bradspringer2372
      @bradspringer2372 Рік тому +9

      I know. I love these channels but sometimes wish the titles matched the content better.

    • @bnjmnwst
      @bnjmnwst Рік тому +5

      There have been no spacecraft landings on Venus, recently, but you expected new visible light photos of the surface? Where did you think those might have come from?

    • @johnnycrown5097
      @johnnycrown5097 Рік тому

      He did say how Venus would look like... You know the maps we use on earth and on your GPS, they are CGI... If it's not honest enough for you, go look for pictures people snapped in the sky... My god you're brainless...

    • @johnnycrown5097
      @johnnycrown5097 Рік тому +9

      Wait a minute... You guys don't even know what you're looking for... The real image of Venus would be a white ball... The other types of image made by using other types of method to get information of the area of Venus he actually showed us... But you thought images mean selfie like images you take with your iphone... If I give you a picture snapped in the 50s and you use Lightroom to clear it up, does that make it CGI??? You guys think, taking a picture means going over there and taking an iphone to it and taking the actual picture of Venus in iphone clarity... The information given by the Magellan satellite gives us the film of Venus in different types of views and we translate it into something people like you expecting iphone clarity can see... You know, how we do with earth when we want to show it as a whole...

    • @kilderok
      @kilderok Рік тому

      @@johnnycrown5097 The fuck are you on about? That's some fine ass-pulling there lol

  • @L8rCloud
    @L8rCloud Рік тому +2

    If Venus flipped 180 deg its rotation would be the same as every other planet’s

  • @andrelaveau8510
    @andrelaveau8510 Рік тому

    Great insught

  • @itzcaseykc
    @itzcaseykc Рік тому +4

    So I wonder why wasn't the Hubble telescope not commissioned to study Venus since being launched into space, especially now that the JWST has been deployed?!

  • @touzj316
    @touzj316 9 місяців тому

    The wind would slow down eventually without a source of energy because of friction. The wind comes from the overwhelming heat, that's the source of energy.

  • @ioanbota9397
    @ioanbota9397 Рік тому

    I like this video its realy so interestyng

  • @hl8333
    @hl8333 Рік тому +2

    I thought the biggest discovery was gas eliminating from Uranus in the 80s😂😂😂

  • @زنكي
    @زنكي Рік тому +1

    We can't understand Fahrenheit?
    It is a strange systeme to measure tempreture.

  • @cryptonite8495
    @cryptonite8495 Рік тому +3

    How did Russia land its probe through a layer of 300-mph winds?

  • @rbilleaud
    @rbilleaud Рік тому +5

    Should have been more precise and said that the planet rotates clockwise when viewed from above the north pole. There is no up or down in space, and when viewed from the south pole it does rotate counterclockwise and all the other planets rotate clockwise. Except Uranus which rotates on its side.

    • @IamSkyeOrion
      @IamSkyeOrion Рік тому +3

      It rotates retrograde from the other planets.

  • @tehdudezorz6322
    @tehdudezorz6322 Рік тому

    At about 2:56 you say that the planet takes 243 earth days to rotate. But at about 4:31 you say the night is 58 earth days. How is this possible? accounting for dusk and sunrise shouldn't it be at least 100 days of darkness? Or a straight day night period 121.5 earth days?

  • @fernandogarajalde4066
    @fernandogarajalde4066 Рік тому +2

    Terraforming Venus would be easier to achieve if we could move it to an orbit closer to ours (say 90 million miles from the sun) and give us the technology needed to migrate our excess population to a new world with a climate similar to ours. 😇

  • @astrocozzyamfilohiades71
    @astrocozzyamfilohiades71 2 місяці тому +1

    📡✨️🪐 Greetings Everyone...

  • @kevinduffy6712
    @kevinduffy6712 Рік тому

    So co2 and nitrogen trap heat?.
    So why does co2 and nitrogen stop combustion?
    As well as being used in welding processes to cool the weld and fire extinguishers.

    • @nephthysbastet4809
      @nephthysbastet4809 Рік тому

      Is it liquid Nitrogen that is used to cool welded objects or is it in a gaseous state?

  • @bmhigginbotham
    @bmhigginbotham Рік тому

    I’m not sure if the narrator is Martin Sheen, Ronnie Cox, or the late Fred award…but he good.

  • @veganism
    @veganism Рік тому

    Cool channel ❤

  • @rdl8878
    @rdl8878 5 місяців тому

    With the high winds, it must make landing incredibly difficult.

  • @Chamuzi
    @Chamuzi Рік тому

    Good video, a few weird pronunciations like carbon dee oxide and vol can ism, but otherwise very informative.

  • @AmeliaDíaz-l4k
    @AmeliaDíaz-l4k Місяць тому

    Venus isn't the only planet in our Solar System that rotates retrogradely; Uranus also do it.

  • @neumoi3324
    @neumoi3324 Рік тому

    But why should the existence of active volcanoes, flowing rivers of molten rock, elevated hills or changing features on any planet in the solar system or elsewhere surprise anybody? Existence of a magnetic field or seismic activity etc would also be a natural result of their mere existence.

  • @Mostopinionatedmanofalltime

    Venus is a hellish place.😮

  • @NondescriptMammal
    @NondescriptMammal Рік тому +3

    If you find the Final Real Images of Venus in this video titled The Final Real Images of Venus, let me know. I only got through three minutes of the aimless wanderings of the narrator before I gave up. All I saw was 95% various artists' conceptions and computer generated images, 5% stock video, and 0% Final Real Images of Venus.

    • @kevinduffy6712
      @kevinduffy6712 Рік тому +1

      Its like that?
      I was waiting for the welcome to planet ceremony.

  • @LeslieAB30
    @LeslieAB30 Рік тому

    What about the six higher planes? Did you know that vegetation on Venus is blue?

  • @marktwain2053
    @marktwain2053 Рік тому +2

    Hmm...so 67 is ⅛ of 93?
    No.
    ⅛ of the distance would put it at just over 81 million miles.
    It's approximately ⅔ closer to the sun.

    • @HumanBeinggg
      @HumanBeinggg Рік тому

      Is it not a third of the distance between earth and the un closer? And at the distance 2/3 of that of the sun and the earth…?

    • @HumanBeinggg
      @HumanBeinggg Рік тому

      But i mean the mistake in the video was obviously much worse

  • @lvlndco
    @lvlndco Рік тому

    Hopefully future generations will be able to adjust Venus' and Earth's obit to cool Venus and make it habitable....and not end up with one or the other flung out into deep space!

  • @clooktout
    @clooktout Рік тому

    So much for millions of years, this suggests young age!

  • @ericckkss
    @ericckkss Рік тому

    Looks like my planet for my collection

  • @bethells86
    @bethells86 8 місяців тому

    Great coverage, except for continuous Showing of images taken on Earth rather than sticking to actual images taken of Venus, gets a little annoying.

  • @reginaldsinclair152
    @reginaldsinclair152 Рік тому

    Other planets are filled with earth's supplies when we start running short on stuff. Our creator send more

  • @rossspenser8314
    @rossspenser8314 Рік тому +1

    We can not even look after are own planet so stop looking

  • @Lochness1313
    @Lochness1313 Рік тому

    These videos are good. But would be more enjoyable if you spoke scientific measurement. NASA and scientists use metric (kilometers, celcius, km/h etc) . Not old measurements of (miles, fahrenheit, mph, etc)

  • @leoblum0631
    @leoblum0631 Рік тому

    "The groundbreaking discovery of volcanoes on Venus' surface"!

  • @yaneznayu9997
    @yaneznayu9997 Рік тому

    67 million miles from the sun is 1/8th closer than Earth's 93 million miles?
    I strenuously resist that suggestion...

  • @manlymoy3116
    @manlymoy3116 3 місяці тому

    Uranus also rotated counterclockwise

  • @RagingViper24
    @RagingViper24 7 місяців тому

    Earth's sister ❤

  • @ACEC0ND0R
    @ACEC0ND0R Рік тому +4

    Video is labeled "real images of Venus", However, video is 90% cgi of everything but Venus.

  • @Marwanova
    @Marwanova Рік тому

    I think Venus was like earth 🌏 before but something happened like the end of the world as a scientist predict the end of the world would be that the Earth spin the opposite direction

  • @LordDeBahs
    @LordDeBahs Рік тому +5

    where are pictures ? i only see generated ones

  • @dennisboran772
    @dennisboran772 Рік тому

    One step closer to destroying the planet we live on while studying a big hot rock Millions miles away we will never live on. Fantastic!

  • @UQRXD
    @UQRXD Рік тому +1

    Yet to see a real image.

  • @M.NadeemBuTt
    @M.NadeemBuTt Рік тому

    nice

  • @MukiBlalock-t9y
    @MukiBlalock-t9y 10 місяців тому

    So essentially everything would spontaneously combust on the surface

  • @DavidRLentz
    @DavidRLentz Рік тому

    Who is the narrator, please?

  • @MrDominex
    @MrDominex 10 місяців тому

    How could microbial life adapt to temperatures so high that liquid water cannot exist and where most chemical processes associated with biology cannot occur?

  • @ChicagoMel23
    @ChicagoMel23 Рік тому +1

    People say it’s known the planets and universe are ancient but it’s really not. The evidence speaks to things being far younger

    • @marktwain2053
      @marktwain2053 Рік тому +4

      What evidence would that be?
      What some ancients, who likely never ventured more than twenty miles from where they were born, claimed?

    • @IamSkyeOrion
      @IamSkyeOrion Рік тому

      In what universe?

  • @invisi-bullexploration2374
    @invisi-bullexploration2374 Рік тому

    There was once a young lady from Venus

  • @radod6147
    @radod6147 6 місяців тому

    ... "no Venus missions till 2030 because funding was cut"... He forgot to mention that funding was cut due to funding wars around the globe. There is no money in Venus exploration, but there is money in wars!

  • @mobilelegendsbangbang12942
    @mobilelegendsbangbang12942 Рік тому +1

    Wheres the real image ???

  • @vickiebunch3072
    @vickiebunch3072 Рік тому

    Yes, the Russians were very far ahead of us in the late 50's and early 60's, but I think we caught up nicely.

    • @katiedotson704
      @katiedotson704 Рік тому

      That is a great part of what makes Russia look so disgusting and sad now. They have had several opportunities throughout history to be a force for positive change. Then when it appears that the country is on the brink of gaining it’s dignity and self-respect, they blow it.

  • @oldgalaxy8015
    @oldgalaxy8015 Рік тому +2

    This is how Earth will look in the future :(

  • @MCNarret
    @MCNarret Рік тому

    My reaction to the volcanos: Ok cool, predictable tbh, but what processes are governing the volcanos?

    • @MCNarret
      @MCNarret Рік тому +1

      @@nerdgenius915 I mean... it's a large planet, it should be warm inside. Like on Earth most volcanos are due to subduction zones, does Venus have only hotspot volcanos or does it have more interesting processes at work? (Not suggesting subduction)

    • @MCNarret
      @MCNarret Рік тому +1

      @@nerdgenius915 woah, what perpetuates that process?

  • @nachman5570
    @nachman5570 Рік тому

    This is Venus?😮

  • @Bay_den_vu_tru
    @Bay_den_vu_tru Рік тому

    Hey, venera 13 operate on venus's surface in 1 hour, not nearly 2 hour

  • @TeW33zy
    @TeW33zy 6 місяців тому

    I’m tired of hearing what the scientists said how about what God said. It’s always scientists this and scientists that like get off they **** what about what God said, what about my Lord. He made this world and he can make another one.

  • @Darkwolfe.
    @Darkwolfe. Рік тому +2

    You can talk all you want about mapping Venus, but the fact still remains that the Russians gave us pictures of the surface of Venus and even sound of the wind on the planet. We claim to be so advanced yet we have achieved nothing to compare to what they have given us.

  • @Bongofurry
    @Bongofurry Рік тому

    nasa ? Almost had me.