Thursday, May 20, 2010

Venus nicknamed as Earth twin


Venus and Earth both share a similar size, gravity and bulk composition and hence, sometimes it is nicknamed as Earth's twin. But with a thick cloak of sulphuric acid clouds and a surface pressure nearly one hundred times that of Earth , makes it less hospitable than Earth. Venus once possessed Earth-like oceans, which evaporated into space to leave a barren landscape.


Venus is a big planet, being heated by radioactive elements in its interior. Some areas in Venus appear to be composed of darker rock , which shows relatively recent volcanic flows.


Both Russia and America sent probes to Venus during the 1970s and 80s – Venera and Pioneer, respectively – that sampled rocks made of basalt. Basalt is formed from cooling lava erupted by volcanoes, and, as is the case on Earth, where magma up-wells along ocean ridges to make new oceanic crust.


The new map of Venus reveals lighter coloured and older rocks with characteristics similar to Earth's granitic continents. Granite is created when basaltic rocks are forced down into the fiery interior of the planet by the process of plate tectonics, which builds and destroys the Earth's crust in an endless cycle. Water combines with the basalt to form granite and the mixture is reborn through volcanic eruptions.


According to the planetary scientists if there is granite in Venus then there must have been ocean in the past.

Labels

academics (1) Action Plans and Lessons (2) American schooling (1) Assessment (5) Asteroid (1) Asteroids (1) astronauts (2) astronomy (1) Astronomy-space (1) Atlantis (3) Betelgeuse (2) Big Picture (10) black hole (1) Blog contest (1) blogging (1) Carbon star (1) Cassini (3) Chandrayaan-I (1) change (1) Christianity (1) collaboration (1) Comet (2) Comets (1) Cosmic blobs (1) Cosmic rays (1) Creative Schools (3) Creative teaching (3) Creative teaching Educationalists (1) Curiosity Rover (1) custom greeting cards (1) custom postcards (1) Earth (6) education (32) education Teenage (2) Emission nebula (1) Enceladus (2) familiy life (1) family life (2) Fermi Space telescope (2) First moon mission (2) Free giveaway (1) Galaxies (4) Galaxy (1) Galaxy M31 (1) Gamma rays (2) Goals 2000 (1) H1N1 (1) health care (1) healthcare (1) Heene (1) Helix nebula (1) Herschel (1) Herschel and Planck spacecraft (1) high school (1) history learning (1) homeschoolers (1) homeschooling (12) HSLDA (1) Hubble Space Telescope (4) Impact on Jupiter (1) Indian moon mission (1) inquiry learning (2) Integrated Learning (1) Japanese Lunar mission (1) Jupiter (2) language learning (1) Leadership (4) learning (1) learning technology (2) LRO (1) Lunar pole (1) Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (1) Lunar water probe (1) M51 (1) Mars (10) math learning (1) media (1) MENSA (1) meteors (1) Michael Jackson (1) Milky way (3) Ministry NZCurric (9) Moon (9) Moon water probe (2) motherhood (1) Muslims (1) NASA (18) national standards (2) NEA (1) nebula (2) Neil Armstrong (1) Obama (2) Orian (1) parenting (3) Pearls (1) Perseids meteors (1) Personalized Learning (4) planets (1) Popular (9) President Barack Obama (2) Pretty pics (1) Privacy Policy (1) public school (1) pulsar (2) Rants and Raves (13) Rare footage of Sun erupting (1) Red dwarf (1) Satellite launcher (1) Saturn (2) science learning (3) science studies (4) Solar eclipse (1) Solar flare (1) solar system (4) Solar winds (1) Soyuz Rocket (2) space (1) Space shuttle Endeavour (5) Space shuttle mission (1) Space-exploration (1) Spacecraft (1) Spitzer Space Telescope (2) Star (1) STEM Education (1) STEM pipeline (1) Stephan's Quintet (1) Sun (2) Swine Flu (1) Talent Development (1) teaching (1) teaching and learning (11) technology learning (2) technology studies (1) teenagers (1) telescopes (2) Titan (1) universal education (1) Uprinting (1) Venus (2) Water (1) Whirlpool galaxy (1)