Venus is sometimes called Earth's evil twin—the two planets have almost the same size and mass, but whereas Earth is ...
Scientists have identified a water-loss mechanism on Venus that could explain how the once water-rich world became completely parched. In the newly identified process, linked to a previously ...
At one point, Venus may have had as much water as Earth. New research may offer an explanation as to why it disappeared ...
Venus could be shedding water to space at a much faster rate than previously thought. That is the conclusion of researchers in the US, who have identified a mechanism in the Venusian ionosphere that ...
Venus lost most of its water due to thermal and non-thermal processes, with new research suggesting a crucial advance.
Venus appears to be more volcanically active than previously known, according to scientists whose new analysis of decades-old ...
Venus loses water due to hydrogen escape caused by molecule HCO+. Research explains the dryness, revealing Venus's water ...
Radar images of the surface of Venus appear to show fresh lava flows, suggesting active volcanoes on the planet.
NASA’s spacecraft Magellan used cloud-penetrating radar to survey most of the planet. But back then, the relatively ...
The exoplanet could have two very different types of atmospheric setups. An Earth-like atmosphere made up of oxygen, nitrogen ...
Astronomers have discovered a rare type of planet called an exo-Venus with a similar temperature to Earth, located in our ...
Astronomers have made the rare and tantalizing discovery of an Earth-like exoplanet 40 light-years away that may be just a ...