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{{Short description|Geological structure and composition of Venus}} | |||
{{SpanTransWeek}} ] | |||
{{more citations needed|date=February 2020}} | |||
] | ] global map of the surface of ]]] | ||
], is centered at 180 degrees east longitude.]] | |||
Venus offers impressive surface characteristics, which are as beautiful as they are peculiar. The majority of what we know today about its surface stems from the observation of radar, mainly through images sent by the ] probe from ], ] until the end of its sixth orbital cycle in ] ]. 98% of the of the planet's surface was mapped, of which 22% are ] images. | |||
The '''geology of Venus''' is the scientific study of the surface, crust, and interior of the planet ]. Within the ], it is the one nearest to ] and most like it in terms of mass, but has no ] or recognizable ] system. Much of the ground surface is exposed volcanic bedrock, some with thin and patchy layers of soil covering, in marked contrast with Earth, the ], and ]. Some impact craters are present, but Venus is similar to Earth in that there are fewer craters than on the other rocky planets that are largely covered by them. This is due in part to the thickness of the ] disrupting small impactors before they strike the ground, but the paucity of large craters may be due to volcanic re-surfacing, possibly of a catastrophic nature. Volcanism appears to be the dominant agent of geological change on Venus. Some of the volcanic landforms appear to be unique to the planet. There are ] and ]{{cn|date=May 2023}} volcanoes similar to those found on Earth, although these volcanoes are significantly shorter than those found on Earth or Mars.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Keddie |first=S. T. |last2=Head |first2=J. W. |date=1994-06-01 |title=Height and altitude distribution of large volcanoes on Venus |url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0032063394900884 |journal=Planetary and Space Science |volume=42 |issue=6 |pages=455–462 |doi=10.1016/0032-0633(94)90088-4 |issn=0032-0633}}</ref> Given that Venus has approximately the same size, density, and composition as Earth, it is plausible that volcanism may be continuing on the planet today, as demonstrated by recent studies.<ref name="VV2020">{{cite journal|title=Present-day volcanism on Venus as evidenced from weathering rates of olivine|author=Justin Filiberto|display-authors=etal|journal=]|date=3 January 2020|doi=10.1126/sciadv.aax7445|pmid=31922004|pmc=6941908|volume=6|issue =1|doi-access=free|bibcode=2020SciA....6.7445F|page=eaax7445}}</ref> | |||
Most of the Venusian surface is relatively flat; it is divided into three topographic units: lowlands, highlands, and plains. In the early days of radar observation the highlands drew comparisons to the continents of Earth, but modern research has shown that this is superficial and the absence of plate tectonics makes this comparison misleading. Tectonic features are present to a limited extent, including linear "deformation belts" composed of folds and faults. These may be caused by mantle convection. Many of the tectonic features such as '']'' (large regions of highly deformed terrain, folded and fractured in two or three dimensions), and '']'' (those features resembling a spider's web) are associated with volcanism. | |||
The surface of Venus is covered by a dense atmosphere and presents clear evidence of volcanic activity in the past, including ] and ] volcanoes similar to ones found on Earth. | |||
] landforms are not widespread on the planet's surface, but there is considerable evidence the planet's atmosphere causes the chemical weathering of rock, especially at high elevations. The planet is remarkably dry, with only a chemical trace of water vapor (20 ]) in the ]. No landforms indicative of past water or ice are visible in radar images of the surface. The atmosphere shows isotopic evidence of having been stripped of volatile elements by off-gassing and solar wind erosion over time, implying the possibility that Venus may have had liquid water at some point in the distant past; no direct evidence for this has been found. Much speculation about the geological history of Venus continues today. | |||
As opposed to the Moon, Mars or Mercury that have suffered an intense period of craterization, Venus has a low density of small ]s but has more medium size to large sized craters. This is explained by the fact that the dense atmosphere of the planet disintegrates smaller ]ites as they enter the atmosphere. | |||
The surface of Venus is not easily accessible because of the extremely thick atmosphere (some 90 times that of Earth's) and the {{convert|470|°C|°F}} surface temperature. Much of what is known about it stems from orbital ] observations, because the surface is permanently obscured in visible wavelengths by cloud cover. In addition, a number of landers have returned data from the surface, including images. | |||
Some other extraordinary characteristics of the planet include features that are called coronæ (] for ]s) based on their appearance and other figures known as arachnoids due to their resemblance to ]s. Long rivers of lava have been discovered, as well as evidence of Aeolian ] and ] shifts which played an essential role in making the surface of Venus as complex as it is today. | |||
Studies reported in October 2023 suggest for the first time that Venus may have had ] during ancient times and, as a result, may have had a more ], possibly once capable of harboring ].<ref name="NYT-20231026"/><ref name="NA-20231026" /> | |||
Despite the fact that Venus is the planet closest to Earth (some 40 million kilometers in lower conjunction) and has a great similarity with the Earth, the resemblance is external: no probes has been able to survive more than a few hours on its surface due to that the atmospheric pressure is some 90 times that of the Earth. The temperature on the surface is around 450°C. This is mostly caused by the greenhouse effect provided by an atmosphere constituted mainly of carbon dioxide (96.5%). | |||
==Topography== | |||
The observations of probes and ] show that <!--What does this mean?????--> el patrón en forma de Y que generan las nubes se debe a que las capas superiores se desplazan alrededor del planeta once every four days suggesting the presence of winds of to 500 km/h. This is believed to be an important factor in the shaping of the land. | |||
] | |||
{{Main|Mapping of Venus}} | |||
The surface of Venus is comparatively flat. When 93% of the ] was mapped by ], scientists found that the total distance from the lowest point to the highest point on the entire surface was about {{convert|13|km|mi}}, about the same as the vertical distance between the Earth's ] and the higher summits of the ]s. This similarity is to be expected as the maximum attainable elevation contrasts on a planet are largely dictated by the strength of the planet's gravity and the mechanical strength of its ], these are similar for Earth and Venus.<ref name="de Pater">{{cite book|last1=de Pater|first1=Imke|last2=Lissauer|first2=Jack J.|title=Planetary Sciences|date=2001|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0521482196|edition=First}}</ref>{{rp|183}} | |||
According to data from the Pioneer Venus Orbiter ]s, nearly 51% of the surface is located within {{convert|500|m|ft|abbr=off|sp=us}} of the median radius of {{convert|6,052|km|mi|abbr=on}}; only 2% of the surface is located at elevations greater than {{convert|2|km|mi}} from the median radius. | |||
==The knowledge of the surface of Venus before the Magellan mission== | |||
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The altimetry experiment of ] confirmed the general character of the landscape. According to the Magellan data, 80% of the topography is within {{convert|1|km|mi|abbr=on}} of the median radius. The most important elevations are in the mountain chains that surround ]: ] (11 km, 6.8 mi), ] (7 km, 4.3 mi) and ] (7 km, 4.3 mi). Despite the relatively flat landscape of Venus, the altimetry data also found large inclined plains. Such is the case on the southwest side of Maxwell Montes, which in some parts seems to be inclined some 45°. Inclinations of 30° were registered in ] and ]. | |||
After the Moon, Venus was the second object in the ] in to be explored by ] from the Earth. The first studies were carried out in ] through the system of antennae of the Network of Deep Space belonging to the Goldstone Station of ]. In the following time lower Venus was observed as much by the radar of Goldstone as that of the ] of the National Center of Astronomy and Ionosphere. <!--This sentence is wrong--> The studies carried out were analogous to the measurement of the time of the midday traffics what permitted to understand for ] that the rotation of Venus was retrograde, or that it revolves on its own ] in the opposite direction of the ] movement. The radar also permitted astronomers to determine that the time of rotation of Venus was of 243.1 days on its axis, which is almost perpendicular to its flat orbit. It was also established that the ] of the planet was of 6.052 km, some 70 km less than was previously ascertained with terrestrial telescopes. | |||
About 75% of the surface is composed of bare rock. | |||
The interest of the geological characteristics of Venus was seen prompted with the refinement of the techniques of images from ] to ]. The first observations using radar simply suggested that the surface of Venus was more compacted that the dusty surface of the Moon. The first images of radar taken from the Earth showed to a planet with very brilliant regions that received the names Alpha, Beta, and Maxwell; with the improvement of radar imaging technology, the quality of resolution arrived at a level of resolution of 1-2 kilometers. | |||
Based on altimeter data from the Pioneer Venus Orbiter probe, supported by Magellan data, the topography of the planet is divided into three provinces: lowlands, deposition plains, and highlands. | |||
Since the beginning of space exploration, Venus was considered as a site for future landings. Each launch opportunity were spaced in periods of 19 months and from ] until ] all the opportunities were utilized, first sending reconissance probes. | |||
===Highlands=== | |||
In ], ] flew over Venus being the first manmade object to visit another planet. In ], ] collided with the surface becoming the first space probe to arrive at a planetary surface. In ] the ] became the first probe to send data from the interior of Venus's atmosphere and finally, in ], ] completed the first landing on Venus. In ] ] transmitted the first images of the surface of Venus and carried out range rays experiment on the rocks of the place of landing. Later, the same year, ] would send other images of the surface. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
This unit covers about 10% of the planet's surface, with elevations greater than {{convert|2|km|mi|abbr=on}}. The largest provinces of the highlands are ], ], and ], as well as the regions ], ] and ]. The regions ], ], ] and ] are smaller regions of highlands. | |||
Some of the terrain in these areas is particularly efficient at reflecting radar signals.<ref name="USGS3116"/>{{rp|p. 1}} This is possibly analogous to ]s on Earth and is likely related to temperatures and pressures there being lower than in the other provinces due to the higher elevation, which allows for distinct mineralogy to occur.{{refn|group=note|name=first|On Venus, for every kilometer of gain in elevation, the average temperature drops by about 8 K, so that the average temperature difference between the top of Maxwell Montes and the lowest basins is about 100 K. This dwarfs the average differences in temperature due to latitudes as well as the day-side and night-side temperature differences, both of which are hardly more than 2 K.<ref name="Basilevsky 2003"/>{{rp|1707}} }} It is thought that high-elevation rock formations may contain or be coated by minerals that have high ].<ref name="USGS3116">{{cite book|last1=Ivanov|first1=Mikhail A.|last2=Head|first2=James W.|title=Scientific Pamphlet, Geologic Map of the Lakshmi Planum Quadrangle (V–7), Venus|date=2010|publisher=USGS|url=http://pubs.usgs.gov/sim/3116/sim3116_pamphlet.pdf|access-date=27 September 2016}}</ref>{{rp|1}} The high dielectric minerals would be stable at the ambient temperatures in the highlands, but not on the plains that comprise the rest of the planet's surface. ], an iron sulfide, matches these criteria and is widely suspected as a possible cause; it would be produced by chemical weathering of the volcanic highlands after long-term exposure to the sulfur-bearing Venusian atmosphere.<ref name="Zolotov">{{cite journal|last1=Zolotov|first1=M.Y.|title=Pyrite Stability on the Surface of Venus|journal=Abstracts of the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference|date=1991|volume=22|pages=1569–1570|bibcode=1991LPI....22.1569Z}}</ref> The presence of pyrite on Venus has been contested, with atmospheric modeling showing that it might not be stable under Venusian atmospheric conditions.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Fegley|first=Bruce|date=1997-08-01|title=Why Pyrite Is Unstable on the Surface of Venus|journal=Icarus|volume=128|issue=2|pages=474–479|doi=10.1006/icar.1997.5744|bibcode=1997Icar..128..474F}}</ref> Other hypotheses have been put forward to explain the higher radar reflectivity in the highlands, including the presence of a ] material whose dielectric constant changes with temperature (with Venus having a changing temperature gradient with elevation).<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Shepard|first1=Michael K.|last2=Arvidson|first2=Raymond E.|last3=Brackett|first3=Robert A.|last4=Fegley|first4=Bruce|date=1994-03-15|title=A ferroelectric model for the low emissivity highlands on Venus|journal=Geophysical Research Letters|language=en|volume=21|issue=6|pages=469–472|doi=10.1029/94GL00392|issn=1944-8007|bibcode=1994GeoRL..21..469S}}</ref> It has been observed that the character of the radar-bright highlands is not consistent across the surface of Venus. For example, ] shows the sharp, snow line-like change in reflectivity that is consistent with a change in mineralogy, whereas ] shows a more gradual brightening upwards trend. The brightening upwards trend on Ovda Regio is consistent with a ferroelectric signature, and has been suggested to indicate the presence of ].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Treiman|first1=Allan|last2=Harrington|first2=Elise|last3=Sharpton|first3=Virgil|date=2016-12-01|title=Venus' radar-bright highlands: Different signatures and materials on Ovda Regio and on Maxwell Montes|journal=Icarus|series=MicroMars to MegaMars|volume=280|pages=172–182|doi=10.1016/j.icarus.2016.07.001|bibcode=2016Icar..280..172T}}</ref> | |||
Also in ], the ] space probe flew over Venus during its mission towards ]. In 1978, the ''Pioneer 12'' probe (also known as '']'' or '']'') flew over Venus and completed the first ] and ] maps of the planet, in sections located between 63 and 78 degrees of ]. The altimetry data had an accuracy of 100 meters. | |||
===Deposition plains=== | |||
That same year, '']'' launched four probes into Venus's atmosphere, which allowed to determine, when combined with data from prior missions, that the surface temperature of the planet was approximately 460°C and that the ] at the surface was 90 times stronger than the pressure found on Earth. This way, the calculations made by the radioemission analysis made before the probes were launched were confirmed. In ], the Soviet '']'' sent the first color image of Venus's surface and analyzed the ] of the ] in an excavated soil sample. Overall, the probe operated for a record 127 minutes on the planet's abrasive surface. Also in 1981, the '']'s'' ] detected possible ] activity in the planet's ]. | |||
Deposition plains have elevations averaging 0 to 2 km and cover more than half of the planet's surface. | |||
===Lowlands=== | |||
En ] los orbitadores '']'' y '']'' dieron un paso más importante en el trabajo comenzado por la ''Pioneer Venus Orbiter'' al adquirir imágenes de radar y datos de altimetría de mayor precisión sobre las latitudes norte del planeta. Las imágenes tenían una resolución de 1-2 kilómetros, comparables a los mejores obtenidas con radares terrestres. Los datos de altimetría tenían un factor de resolución superior equivalente a 4 del de ''Pioneer''. En ] con la euforia del ], los soviéticos lanzaron a dos módulos de aterrizaje '']''. Los landers 1 y 2 soltaron cada uno un globo de ] a una altura de 50 km sobre la superficie de Venus y así poder estudiar la dinámica de su atmósfera en su sección más activa. | |||
The rest of the surface is ''lowlands'' and generally lies below zero elevation. Radar reflectivity data suggest that at a centimeter scale these areas are smooth, as a result of ''gradation'' (accumulation of fine material eroded from the highlands). | |||
==Surface observations== | |||
Todas estas sondas contribuyeron a la adquisición de datos necesarios para lograr el éxito de la sonda ''Magellan'', con la que se conocieron los aspectos más íntimos de la geología de Venus. | |||
Ten spacecraft have successfully landed on Venus and returned data; all were flown by the ]. ], ], ], and ] had cameras and returned images of ] and ]. ] results showed that these four missions kicked up dust clouds on landing, which means that some of the dust particles must be smaller than about 0.02 mm. The rocks at all four sites showed fine layers, some layers were more reflective than others. Experiments on rocks at the Venera 13 and 14 sites found that they were porous and easily crushed (bearing maximum loads of 0.3 to 1 ]){{refn|group=note|name=second|0.3 MPa is about the amount of pressure exerted by water flowing out of a typical garden hose. 1 MPa is just under the pressure of the average human bite.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=0.3%20MPa|title=Wolfram-Alpha: Computational Knowledge Engine|work=wolframalpha.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=1%20MPa|title=Wolfram-Alpha: Computational Knowledge Engine|work=wolframalpha.com}}</ref><!--This is weird but most people aren't accustomed to thinking about pressure units, so the analogy helps. It's also allowable under WP:Calc-->}} these rocks may be weakly lithified sediments or volcanic tuff.<ref name="Basilevsky 2003"/>{{rp|1709}} Spectrometry found that the surface materials at the Venera 9, 10, 14 and Vega 1 and 2 landing had chemical compositions similar to tholeiitic basalts, while the Venera 8 and 13 sites chemically resembled alkaline basalts.<ref name="Basilevsky 2003"/>{{rp|1707–1709}} | |||
==Impact craters and age estimates of the surface== | |||
==Magellan estudia la geología de Venus== | |||
] crater in relief]] | |||
Earth-based radar surveys made it possible to identify some topographic patterns related to ], and the '']'' and '']'' probes identified almost 150 such features of probable impact origin. Global coverage from ''Magellan'' subsequently made it possible to identify nearly 900 impact craters. ], ] and ] craters]] | |||
Lanzada el ] de ] a bordo del ], la sonda Magellan fue puesta en órbita terrestre hasta el momento en que el motor de su etapa superior inercial le diera el empuje necesario para ubicarla en una trayectoria de transferencia a Venus. El ] Magellan llegó a Venus, y empezó a tomar imágenes en radar. En cada día completó 7,3 órbitas de imágenes de Venus. Cada órbita tenía una franja de cobertura de 20 a 25 kilómetros de ancho y unos 70.000 km de largo. La cobertura de todo el planeta requirió de 1.800 franjas de imágenes las cuales fueron combinadas en un mosaico para producir una imagen coherente. | |||
Compared to ], the ] and other such bodies, Venus has very few craters. In part, this is because Venus's dense atmosphere burns up smaller ]ites before they hit the surface.<ref name=Bougher>{{cite book |title=Venus II – Geology, Geophysics, Atmosphere, and Solar Wind Environment |last1=Bougher |first1=S. W. |last2=Hunten |first2=D. M. |last3=Philips |first3=R. J. | |||
Las primeras imágenes de Venus fueron recibidas el ] de ] y las operaciones de mapeo rutinario comenzaron el ] de 1990. El primer ciclo de mapeo (Ciclo 1) duró 243 días terrestres –el tiempo que le toma a Venus girar sobre su propio eje debajo del plano orbital de la nave. El Ciclo 1 terminó exitosamente el ] de ] dedicado al mapeo del 84% de la superficie venusiana.<br> | |||
|first4=William B. |last4=McKinnon |first5=Kevin J. |last5=Zahnle |first6=Boris A. |last6=Ivanov |first7=H. J. |last7=Melosh |date=1997 |publisher=] |location=Tucson |isbn=978-0-8165-1830-2 |page=969}}</ref> The ''Venera'' and ''Magellan'' data are in agreement: there are very few impact craters with a diameter less than {{convert|30|km|mi}}, and data from ''Magellan'' show an absence of any craters less than {{convert|2|km|mi}} in diameter. The small craters are irregular and appear in groups, thus pointing to the deceleration and the breakup of impactors.<ref name=Bougher /> However, there are also fewer of the large craters, and those appear relatively young; they are rarely filled with lava, showing that they were formed after volcanic activity in the area ceased, and radar data indicates that they are rough and have not had time to be eroded down. | |||
Inmediatamente a la primera etapa de mapeo le siguió el Ciclo 2 que duró hasta el ] de ]. En este segundo ciclo, el mapeo de la superficie fue hecho con una inclinación de observación derecha para compensar la inclinación izquierda utilizada durante el Ciclo 1. Estas técnicas de observación radar permitieron a los científicos determinar las alturas de ciertos patrones ].<br> | |||
El Ciclo 3 iba a terminar el ] de 1992, pero su conclusión tuvo que adelantarse un día debido a problemas con el equipo de abordo. En total se logró una cobertura radar del 98% de la superficie de Venus con el 22% de las imágenes en estéreo. | |||
Compared to the situation on bodies such as the Moon, it is more difficult to determine the ages of different areas of the surface on Venus, on the basis of crater counts, due to the small number of craters at hand.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Venus: Estimation of age of impact craters on the basis of degree of preservation of associated radar-dark deposits|first1=A. T.|last1=Basilevsky|first2=J. W.|last2=Head|first3=I. V.|last3=Setyaeva|date=1 September 2003|journal=Geophys. Res. Lett.|volume=30|issue=18|pages=1950|doi=10.1029/2003GL017504|bibcode=2003GeoRL..30.1950B|citeseerx = 10.1.1.556.5966|s2cid=7746232 }}</ref> However, the surface characteristics are consistent with a completely random distribution,<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Kreslavsky|first1=Mikhail A.|last2=Ivanov|first2=Mikhail A.|last3=Head|first3=James W.|title=The resurfacing history of Venus: Constraints from buffered crater densities|journal=Icarus|date=21 December 2014|volume=250|pages=438–450|url=http://planetary.brown.edu/pdfs/4932.pdf|access-date=7 October 2016|doi=10.1016/j.icarus.2014.12.024|bibcode=2015Icar..250..438K|archive-date=28 July 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190728152854/http://www.planetary.brown.edu/pdfs/4932.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref> implying that the surface of the entire planet is roughly the same age, or at least that very large areas are not very different in age from the average. | |||
Las imágenes provistas por la sonda Magellan son las más nítidas que se dispone de Venus y la cantidad de las mismas es mayor a la producida por todas las naves anteriores. | |||
Taken together, this evidence suggests that the surface of Venus is geologically young. The impact crater distribution appears to be most consistent with models that call for a near-complete resurfacing of the planet. Subsequent to this period of extreme activity, process rates declined and impact craters began to accumulate, with only minor modification and resurfacing since. | |||
El Ciclo 5 se dedicó a la recolección de datos de gravedad y terminó el ] de ]. El Ciclo 5 y 6 fueron dedicados a la recolección de datos de gravedad con mayor precisión, para ello, la sonda Magellan fue ubicada a una órbita circular más baja. La órbita más baja y segura en Venus se ubica a unos 200 km sobre la superficie. El procedimiento se llevó a cabo a través del ], una técnica por la que la nave disminuyó la velocidad para ser atraída por la ] del planeta y de esa manera ser frenada lentamente por la ] con la ], disminuyendo el ]. Esta maniobra se llevó a cabo desde el final del Ciclo 4 hasta principios de ] de 1993. | |||
A young surface all created at the same time is a different situation compared with any of the other terrestrial planets. | |||
El ] de ] cuando se programó que la nave se zambullera en la atmósfera de Venus para estudiar su dinámica, los controladores de Tierra perdieron el contacto. Al día siguiente Magellan se había quemado en la atmósfera de Venus completando una misión exitosa. | |||
==Global resurfacing event== | |||
==Surface characteristics== | |||
Age estimates based on crater counts indicate a young surface, in contrast to the much older surfaces of Mars, Mercury, and the Moon.{{refn|group=note|name=third|Dating geological formations by crater counting is a long established and relatively inexpensive mainstay of planetary science. No rock from Venus has ever been dated using laboratory methods, as no meteorites from Venus are known and no spacecraft have ever returned samples from the planet to the Earth. The planet's considerable gravity and thick atmosphere mean this is unlikely to change in the near future.}} For this to be the case on a planet without crustal recycling by plate tectonics requires explanation. One hypothesis is that Venus underwent some sort of global resurfacing about 300–500 million years ago that erased the evidence of older craters.<ref>{{Cite journal | doi=10.1029/94JE00388|title = The global resurfacing of Venus| journal=Journal of Geophysical Research| volume=99| pages=10899|year = 1994|last1 = Strom|first1 = Robert G.| last2=Schaber| first2=Gerald G.| last3=Dawson| first3=Douglas D.|issue = E5|url = https://zenodo.org/record/1231347| bibcode=1994JGR....9910899S}}</ref> | |||
One possible explanation for this event is that it is part of a cyclic process on Venus. On Earth, plate tectonics allows heat to escape from the mantle by ], the transport of mantle material to the surface and the return of old crust to the mantle. But Venus has no evidence of plate tectonics, so this theory states that the interior of the planet heats up (due to the decay of radioactive elements) until material in the mantle is hot enough to force its way to the surface.<ref name="sbattaglia">{{Cite journal|url = http://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2016/pdf/1090.pdf|title = Venus: Could Resurfacing Events be Triggered by Sun's Oscillations through the Galactic Mid-Plane?|last = Battaglia|first = Steven M.|date = March 2016|journal = The 47th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference}}</ref> The subsequent resurfacing event covers most or all of the planet with lava, until the mantle is cool enough for the process to start over. | |||
Con la invención del ] Venus se convirtió en el objeto de observaciones ópticas más interesante. En el pasado muchos astrónomos han asegurado ver marcas oscuras en la capa de nubes que lo envuelve, otros han dicho que incluso pudieron ver parte de la superficie en huecos de nubes. Otras de estas aseveraciones es que muchos astrónomos aseguraban haber visto puntos brillantes en lugares determinados del disco del planeta sugiriendo que se trataba de una enorme montaña cuya cima sobrepasaba las ]s más altas. Tal es el caso de ], un respetado observador y colaborador de ], que informó los avistamientos entre ] y ]. La descripción de su informe decía que se trataba de una prominente montaña ubicada en el ] que separa al hemisferio iluminado del oscuro. A pesar de la controversia esta observación ha sido muy citada en el tiempo. | |||
==Volcanoes== | |||
La realidad es otra: la superficie de Venus es bastante plana. El 93% de la ] mapeada por las sondas ''Pioneer Venus'' encontraron que el total de la superficie (desde los puntos más bajos a los más altos) se espaciaban en unos 13 km, mientras que en la Tierra la diferencia entre las ] y el ] es una franja de 20 km. | |||
{{Main|Volcanism on Venus}} | |||
]s in Venus's Eistla region. The two larger ones are approximately {{convert|65|km|mi|abbr=on}} wide and rise less than {{convert|1|km|mi|abbr=on}} above the surrounding plain. These wide and fairly low, flat-topped volcanoes are a type of landform that is unique to Venus. They were probably formed by extrusions of highly viscous lava that was too sticky to flow very far down-slope from their vents.]] | |||
De acuerdo a los datos de ] de las ''Pioneer'', cerca del 51% de la superficie se encuentra ubicada dentro de los 500 metros del radio medio de 6.051,9 km; sólo el 2% de la superficie está ubicada a elevaciones mayores a los 2 km. sobre el radio medio.<br> | |||
El experimento de altimetría de ''Magellan'' confirmó la chatura general del paisaje. En los datos de ''Magellan'', el 80% de la topografía reside en un margen de 1 km del radio medio. Las elevaciones más importantes están en las cadenas montañosas que rodean Lakshmi Planum: Maxwell Montes (11 km), Akna Montes (7 km) y Freyja Montes (7 km). A pesar del paisaje relativamente plano de Venus, los datos de altimetría también hallaron grandes planos inclinados, tal es el caso del flanco sudoeste del Maxwell Montes que en algunas partes parece estar inclinado unos 45°. Otras inclinaciones de 30° fueron registradas en Danu Montes y la región al este de Thetis Regio. | |||
]. The domes in this image are up to 750 m high and average 25 km in diameter.]] | |||
===Divisiones de Venus=== | |||
] surface feature on Venus]] | |||
En base a los datos de altimetría de las sondas ''Pioneer Venus'', la topografía del planeta está dividida en tres provincias topográficas: tierras bajas, planicies de deposición y tierras altas.<br> | |||
Los datos de Magellan apoyan estas divisiones. Las provincias más importantes de las tierras altas son Aphrodite Terra, Ishtar Terra, Lada Terra, además de las regiones de Beta, Phoebe y Themis. Las regiones Alpha, Bell, Eistla y Telhus forman un conjunto de tierras altas de menor importancia. | |||
The surface of Venus is dominated by ]. Although Venus is superficially similar to Earth, it seems that the ] so active in Earth's geology do not exist on Venus. About 80% of the planet consists of a mosaic of volcanic ] plains, dotted with more than a hundred large isolated ]es, and many hundreds of smaller volcanoes and volcanic constructs such as '']''. These are geological features believed to be almost unique to Venus: huge, ring-shaped structures {{convert|100|-|300|km|mi|abbr=off|sp=us}} across and rising hundreds of meters above the surface. The only other place they have been discovered is on ] moon ]. It is believed that they are formed when plumes of rising hot material in the ] push the crust upwards into a dome shape, which then collapses in the centre as the molten lava cools and leaks out at the sides, leaving a crown-like structure: the corona. | |||
==Impact craters== | |||
Differences can be seen in volcanic deposits. In many cases, volcanic activity is localized to a fixed source, and deposits are found in the vicinity of this source. This kind of volcanism is called "centralized volcanism," in that volcanoes and other geographic features form distinct regions. The second type of volcanic activity is not radial or centralized; ]s cover wide expanses of the surface, similar to features such as the ] on Earth. These eruptions result in "flow type" volcanoes. | |||
<div style="float:right;margin:0 0 1em 1em;text-align:center;">]<br>Figura 7 ]</div> | |||
Volcanoes less than {{convert|20|km|mi}} in diameter are very abundant on Venus and they may number hundreds of thousands or even millions. Many appear as flattened domes or 'pancakes', thought to be formed in a similar way to ]es on Earth.{{citation needed|date=October 2016}}{{refn|group=note|name=fourth|But note the contrast: shield volcanism on Earth is associated with low viscosity lava, whereas Venusian domes are caused by very high viscosity, gummy lavas.}} These ] volcanoes are fairly round features that are less than {{convert|1|km|mi|adj=on}} in height and many times that in width. It is common to find groups of hundreds of these volcanoes in areas called shield fields. The ]s of Venus are between 10 and 100 times larger than those formed on Earth. They are usually associated with "coronae" and ''tesserae''. The pancakes are thought to be formed by highly viscous, ]-rich lava erupting under Venus's high atmospheric pressure. Domes called ]s (commonly called ''ticks'' because they appear as domes with numerous ''legs''), are thought to have undergone mass wasting events such as landslides on their margins. Sometimes deposits of debris can be seen scattered around them. | |||
Con el estudio de radares ubicados en la Tierra fue posible identificar algunos patrones topográficos relacionados a ]es y en los años siguientes con las sondas ''Venera 15'' y ''16'' se identificaron casi 150 de probable origen de impacto. Con ''Magellan'', gracias a una cobertura global se identificaron cerca de 900 cráteres de impacto. Esta cifra es muy baja considerando la superficie del planeta. La diferencia en este sentido respecto a ], la ] y ] (además de varias lunas de los planetas exteriores) que tienen una superficie muy castigada por un intenso proceso de craterización, es que Venus posee una densa atmósfera y un proceso tectónico (en el pasado) que ha ayudado a filtrar los ]s eliminando a los más pequeños. | |||
On Venus, volcanoes are mainly of the shield type.{{citation needed|date=October 2016}}<!--how do the viscous, high silica pancake domes fit in this summary?--> Nevertheless, the morphology of the shield volcanoes of Venus is different from shield volcanoes on Earth. On the Earth, shield volcanoes can be a few tens of kilometers wide and up to 10 kilometers high (6.2 mi) in the case of ], measured from the ] floor. On Venus, these volcanoes can cover hundreds of kilometers in area, but they are relatively flat, with an average height of {{convert|1.5|km|mi}}. | |||
<div style="float:center;margin:0 0 1em 1em;text-align:center;">]<br>Figura 8 ]</div> | |||
Other unique features of Venus's surface are ''novae'' (radial networks of ]s or ]s) and ]s. A nova is formed when large quantities of magma are extruded onto the surface to form radiating ridges and trenches which are highly reflective to radar. These dikes form a symmetrical network around the central point where the lava emerged, where there may also be a depression caused by the collapse of the ]. | |||
Los datos de las ''Veneras'' y ''Magellan'' coinciden: hay muy pocos cráteres de diámetro inferior a los 30 km, y los datos de ''Magellan'' revelaron la ausencia de cráteres menores a los 2 km de diámetro. Los cráteres de Venus presentan peculiaridades únicas: en primer lugar, los de Venus parecen ser relativamente nuevos y no parecen haber sufrido el deterioro que se produce por la ]. Los cráteres de impacto presentan grandes coladas de lava de color claro al radar (de alta reflexión) lo que demuestra que son jóvenes (Figuras 7 y 8). | |||
Arachnoids are so named because they resemble a ] web, featuring several concentric ovals surrounded by a complex network of radial fractures similar to those of a nova. It is not known whether the 250 or so features identified as arachnoids actually share a common origin, or are the result of different geological processes. | |||
El análisis de las imágenes de los cráteres de impacto, su superposición, distribución y densidad en la superficie –entre otras características– son muy importantes para conocer la historia geológica del planeta. | |||
==Tectonic activity== | |||
==Volcanes== | |||
Despite the fact that Venus appears to have no global plate tectonic system as such, the planet's surface shows various features associated with local tectonic activity. Features such as ], ], and ]es are present there and may be driven largely by processes in the mantle. | |||
The active volcanism of Venus has generated chains of folded mountains, rift valleys, and terrain known as ''tesserae'', a word meaning "floor tiles" in Greek. Tesserae exhibit the effects of eons of compression and tensional deformation. | |||
<div style="float:right;margin:0 0 1em 1em;text-align:center;">]<br>Figura 9 ]</div> | |||
Unlike those on Earth, the deformations on Venus are directly related to regional dynamic forces within the planet's ]. Gravitational studies suggest that Venus differs from Earth in lacking an ]—a layer of lower ] and mechanical weakness that allows Earth's crustal tectonic plates to move. The apparent absence of this layer on Venus suggests that the deformation of the Venusian surface must be explained by ] within the planet's mantle. | |||
La transferencia de material caliente desde el interior de un planeta a su exterior constituye el principal proceso de para la pérdida de calor. El calor interno tiene proviene de cuatro procesos: | |||
*Calor proveniente de la acreción original del planeta o luna, | |||
*Calor producido por la desintegración de elementos ] en el interior del planeta, | |||
*Calor que resulta del movimiento interno del planeta, | |||
*Calor que se produce por las interacciones de ] de masas adyacentes. | |||
The tectonic deformations on Venus occur on a variety of scales, the smallest of which are related to linear fractures or faults. In many areas these faults appear as networks of parallel lines. Small, discontinuous mountain crests are found which resemble those on the ] and ]. The effects of extensive tectonism are shown by the presence of ''normal faults'', where the crust has sunk in one area relative to the surrounding rock, and superficial fractures. Radar imaging shows that these types of deformation are concentrated in belts located in the equatorial zones and at high southern ]s. These belts are hundreds of kilometers wide and appear to interconnect across the whole of the planet, forming a global network associated with the distribution of volcanoes. | |||
En la Tierra, existe una combinación de factores que dan origen a la pérdida de calor, en el caso de algunos cuerpos como la luna de ], ] la fuerza gravitacional de Júpiter y ] producen enormes movimientos de marea que dan lugar a los volcanes más activos del ]. | |||
The ]s of Venus, formed by the expansion of the ], are groups of depressions tens to hundreds of meters wide and extending up to {{convert|1,000|km|mi|abbr=on}} in length. The rifts are mostly associated with large volcanic elevations in the form of domes, such as those at ], ] and the western part of ]. These highlands seem to be the result of enormous ]s (rising currents of magma) which have caused elevation, fracturing, faulting, and volcanism. | |||
A pesar de que Venus tiene una gran semejanza a la Tierra, parece ser que los procesos de ] que son muy activos en la Tierra no existen en Venus, sin embargo se cree que el 80% de los accidentes geográficos de su superficie están relacionados a un tipo de proceso volcánico. | |||
The highest mountain chain on Venus, ] in ], was formed by processes of compression, expansion, and lateral movement. Another type of geographical feature, found in the lowlands, consists of ''ridge belts'' elevated several meters above the surface, hundreds of kilometers wide and thousands of kilometers long. Two major concentrations of these belts exist: one in ] near the southern pole, and the second adjacent to ] near the northern pole. | |||
Las diferencias se encuentran en los depósitos volcánicos. En muchos casos el vulcanismo está localizado en una fuente determinada y los depósitos de organizan a los alrededores de esta fuente. Este tipo de vulcanismo recibe el nombre de “vulcanismo centralizado” en los que se forman volcanes además de otras formas geográficas extrañas.<br> | |||
El segundo tipo de vulcanismo no es radial o centralizado sino que abarca áreas muy extensas del planeta con coladas de lavas. Estas erupciones son catalogadas como de “tipo fluido”. | |||
Tesserae are found mainly in ], ], ] and the eastern part of ] (]). These regions contain the superimposition and intersection of ]s of different geological units, indicating that these are the oldest parts of the planet. It was once thought that the tesserae were ] associated with tectonic plates like those of the Earth; in reality they are probably the result of floods of basaltic lava forming large plains, which were then subjected to intense tectonic fracturing.<ref name="Basilevsky 2003">{{cite journal| last=Basilevsky| first= A. T.|author2=J. W. Head III| date=2003| url=http://porter.geo.brown.edu/planetary/documents/2875.pdf| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060327035304/http://porter.geo.brown.edu/planetary/documents/2875.pdf| archive-date=2006-03-27| title= The surface of Venus| journal=Reports on Progress in Physics| volume=66| issue=10| pages=1699–1734| doi= 10.1088/0034-4885/66/10/R04|bibcode = 2003RPPh...66.1699B | s2cid= 250815558}}</ref> | |||
<div style="float:right;margin:0 0 1em 1em;text-align:center;">]<br>Figura 10 ]</div> | |||
Nonetheless, studies reported on 26 October 2023 suggest that Venus, for the first time, may have had ] during ancient times. As a result, Venus may have had a more ], and possibly once capable of ].<ref name="NYT-20231026">{{cite news |last=Chang |first=Kenneth |title=Billions of Years Ago, Venus May Have Had a Key Earthlike Feature - A new study makes the case that the solar system’s hellish second planet once may have had plate tectonics that could have made it more hospitable to life. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/26/science/venus-plate-tectonics-life.html |date=26 October 2023 |work=] |url-status=live |archiveurl=https://archive.today/20231026181052/https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/26/science/venus-plate-tectonics-life.html |archivedate=26 October 2023 |accessdate=27 October 2023 }}</ref><ref name="NA-20231026">{{cite journal |author=Weller, Matthew B. |display-authors=et al. |title=Venus’s atmospheric nitrogen explained by ancient plate tectonics |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-023-02102-w |date=26 October 2023 |journal=] |doi=10.1038/s41550-023-02102-w |url-status=live |archiveurl=https://archive.today/20231027132655/https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-023-02102-w |archivedate=27 October 2023 |accessdate=27 October 2023 }}</ref> | |||
Se comprobó que la presencia de volcanes menores de 20 km en diámetro son muy abundantes sobre Venus y pueden llegar a un número de cientos de miles y hasta millones. Su apariencia es la de domos, pero en realidad tienen una semejanza a los ]. Estos volcanes tienen entre 1 y 15 km de diámetro y menos de 1 km de altura. Es frecuente encontrar grupos de cientos de estos volcanes en áreas que se llaman campos de escudo (Figura 10). | |||
==Magnetic field and internal structure== | |||
En la Tierra, los volcanes son principalmente de dos tipos: ] y ] o estrato-volcanes. Los volcanes en escudos como los ] reciben ] de las profundidades de la Tierra en unas zonas llamadas '']'' (''puntos calientes''). El tipo de ] de estos volcanes es relativamente fluida y permite el escape de gases. Los volcanes compuestos, como el ] y el ] están asociados a las placas tectónicas. En este tipo de volcanes, el agua de la ] baja junto a la placa que se desliza en la ] debajo de la ] y de esta manera facilita un mejor derretimiento de la misma produciendo una lava más viscosa que dificulta la salida de los gases, por este motivo, los volcanes compuestos tienen erupciones violentas. | |||
] | |||
Venus's crust appears to be {{convert|20 - 25|km|mi}} thick on average, and composed of mafic ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Jiménez-Díaz |first=Alberto |last2=Ruiz |first2=Javier |last3=Kirby |first3=Jon F. |last4=Romeo |first4=Ignacio |last5=Tejero |first5=Rosa |last6=Capote |first6=Ramón |date=2015-11-01 |title=Lithospheric structure of Venus from gravity and topography |url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0019103515003115 |journal=Icarus |volume=260 |pages=215–231 |doi=10.1016/j.icarus.2015.07.020 |issn=0019-1035|hdl=20.500.11937/33938 |hdl-access=free }}</ref> Venus's ] is approximately {{convert|2840|km|mi}} thick, its chemical composition is probably similar to that of ].<ref name="Basilevsky 2003"/>{{rp|1729}} Since Venus is a ], it is presumed to have a core, made of semisolid ] and ] with a ] of approximately {{convert|3,000|km|mi}}.{{citation needed|date=October 2016}} | |||
The unavailability of seismic data from Venus severely limits what can be definitely known about the structure of the planet's mantle, but models of Earth's mantle have been modified to make predictions. It is expected that the uppermost mantle, from about {{convert|70|to|480|km|mi}} deep is mostly made of the mineral ]. Descending through the mantle, the chemical composition remains largely the same but at somewhere between about {{convert|480|and|760|km|mi}}, the increasing pressure causes the crystal structure of olivine to change to the more densely packed structure of ]. Another transition occurs between {{convert|760|and|1000|km|mi}} deep, where the material takes on the progressively more compact crystal structures of ] and ], and gradually becomes more like perovskite until the core boundary is reached.<ref name="Basilevsky 2003"/>{{rp|1729–1730}} | |||
En Venus, la morfología (con grandes y delgadas coladas de lava), aparente ausencia de tectónica de placas y agua hacen que los volcanes se parezcan a los de Hawai. Sin embargo, el tamaño de los volcanes de Venus es distinto: en la Tierra los volcanes en escudo pueden tener decenas de kilómetros de ancho y sólo hasta 8 km de altura (], si se considera su base ubicada en el lecho marino), en Venus, la amplitud de estos volcanes llega a cubrir cientos de kilómetros pero son bastante chatos, con una altura promedio de 1,5 km. | |||
Venus is similar to Earth in size and density, and so probably also in bulk composition, but it does not have a significant ].<ref name="Basilevsky 2003"/>{{rp|1729–1730}} Earth's magnetic field is produced by what is known as the ], consisting of an electrically conducting liquid, the nickel-iron outer core that rotates and is ]. Venus is expected to have an electrically conductive core of similar composition, and although its rotation period is very long (243.7 Earth days), simulations show that this is adequate to produce a dynamo.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Stevenson|first1=David J.|title=Planetary magnetic fields|journal=Earth and Planetary Science Letters|date=15 March 2003|volume=208|issue=1–2|pages=1–11|doi=10.1016/S0012-821X(02)01126-3|bibcode=2003E&PSL.208....1S|url=https://authors.library.caltech.edu/12373/1/STErpp83.pdf}}</ref> This implies that Venus lacks convection in its outer core. Convection occurs when there is a large difference in temperature between the inner and outer part of the core, but since Venus has no plate tectonics to let off heat from the mantle, it is possible that outer core convection is being suppressed by a warm mantle. It is also possible that Venus may lack a solid inner core for the same reason, if the core is either too hot or is not under enough pressure to allow molten nickel-iron to freeze there.<ref name="Basilevsky 2003"/>{{rp|1730}}{{refn|group=note|name=fifth|If there is no gradually freezing inner core, then there is no release of the ] there to steepen the temperature gradient and increase convection.}} | |||
<div style="float:right;margin:0 0 1em 1em;text-align:center;">]<br>Figura 11 ]</div> | |||
==Lava flows and channels== | |||
Los domos de Venus son entre 10 y 100 veces más amplios que los terrestres y en el radar exhiben fracturas que indican que han sido formadas por la tensión creada por el ascenso de lava viscosa en el interior de la corteza o por el hundimiento de la cámara magmática. Estos domos masivos reciben el nombre informal de “domos panqueques” y por lo general están asociados con ''coronae'' y ''tesserae''. Su presencia es una fuerte evidencia de la existencia de lavas de composición química evolucionada (Figura 9 y 11). | |||
] caldera (300 km outside the image) overflowed the ridge left of center and pooled to its right.]] | |||
]]] | |||
Lava flows on Venus are often much larger than Earth's, up to several hundred kilometers long and tens of kilometers wide. It is still unknown why these lava fields or ''lobate flows'' reach such sizes, but it is suggested that they are the result of very large eruptions of basaltic, low-viscosity lava spreading out to form wide, flat plains.<ref name="Basilevsky 2003"/> | |||
On Earth, there are two known types of basaltic lava: ] and ]. {{okina}}A{{okina}}a lava presents a rough texture in the shape of broken blocks (]). Pāhoehoe lava is recognized by its pillowy or ropy appearance. Rough surfaces appear bright in radar images, which can be used to determine the differences between {{okina}}a{{okina}}a and pāhoehoe lavas. These variations can also reflect differences in lava age and preservation. Channels and ] (channels that have cooled down and over which a dome has formed) are very common on Venus. Two planetary astronomers from the ] in Australia, Dr Graeme Melville and Prof. Bill Zealey, researched these lava tubes, using data supplied by NASA, over a number of years and concluded that they were widespread and up to ten times the size of those on the Earth. Melville and Zealey said that the gigantic size of the Venusian lava tubes (tens of meters wide and hundreds of kilometers long) may be explained by the very fluid lava flows together with the high temperatures on Venus, allowing the lava to cool slowly. | |||
Otras características únicas son la existencia de novas ("novae") y aracnoides.<br> | |||
For the most part, lava flow fields are associated with volcanoes. The central volcanoes are surrounded by extensive flows that form the core of the volcano. They are also related to fissure craters, ], dense clusters of ], ], wells and channels. | |||
<div style="float:right;margin:0 0 1em 1em;text-align:center;">]<br>Figura 12 ]</div> | |||
Thanks to ''Magellan'', more than 200 channels and valley complexes have been identified. The channels were classified as simple, complex, or compound. Simple channels are characterized by a single, long main channel. This category includes ]s similar to those found on the ], and a new type, called ''canali'', consisting of long, distinct channels which maintain their width throughout their entire course. The longest such channel identified (]) has a length of more than {{convert|6,800|km|mi}}, about one-sixth of the circumference of the planet. | |||
La formación de las novas se da cuando grandes cantidades de ] llegan hasta la superficie sin erupcionar formando ]s extrusivos que son brillantes a las imágenes de radar. Estos diques se organizan en lineamientos simétricos que denotan el área de levantamiento, aunque también se puede producir una depresión causada por la subsidencia del material magmático. Si tales lineamientos, sean éstos ]s o crestas, se irradian desde un punto central reciben el nombre de novas (nombre usado para enfatizar la semejanza a la figura de una estrella que ha explotado). Se han identificado cerca de 50 de estas estructuras.<br> | |||
Cuando los lineamientos de grabens, fisuras, y crestas se extienden varios radios desde la circunferencia de un punto central reciben el nombre de aracnoides, indicativo de su apariencia. Se identificaron cerca de 250 aracnoides. | |||
Complex channels include ] networks, in addition to distribution networks. This type of channel has been observed in association with several impact craters and important lava floods related to major lava flow fields. Compound channels are made of both simple and complex segments. The largest of these channels shows an anastomosed web and modified hills similar to those present on ]. | |||
<center>]</center> | |||
Although the shape of these channels is highly suggestive of fluid erosion, there is no evidence that they were formed by water. In fact, there is no evidence of water anywhere on Venus in the last 600 million years. While the most popular theory for the channels' formation is that they are the result of thermal erosion by lava, there are other hypotheses, including that they were formed by heated fluids formed and ejected during impacts. | |||
==Tectonismo== | |||
==Surface processes== | |||
<div style="float:right;margin:0 0 1em 1em;text-align:center;">]<br> Figura 13 ]</div> | |||
] | |||
===Wind=== | |||
Venus no presenta indicios de tectónica de placas, sin embargo, su superficie sí presenta varios patrones geográficos asociados con procesos tectónicos que a través del movimiento fluido del interior del planeta han generado terrenos con fallas, ]s, volcanes, grandes montañas, ] y la compresión y extensión de la superficie (Figura 13). | |||
Liquid water and ice are nonexistent on Venus, and thus the only agent of ] to be found (apart from thermal erosion by lava flows) is wind. Wind tunnel experiments have shown that the density of the atmosphere allows the transport of sediments with even a small breeze.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Greeley, R. |display-authors=et al |date=1984 |title=Windblown sand on Venus |journal=Icarus |volume=57 |pages=112–124 |postscript=; |doi=10.1016/0019-1035(84)90013-7}} cited in {{cite journal | year = 2012| title = Aeolian processes on the terrestrial planets: Recent observations and future focus | journal = Progress in Physical Geography | volume = 36| pages = 110–124 | doi = 10.1177/0309133311425399 | last1 = Craddock | first1 = Robert A.| s2cid = 129491924 |hdl=10088/17607}}</ref> Therefore, the seeming rarity of eolian land forms must have some other cause.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Greeley, R. |display-authors=et al |date=1984 |title=Windblown sand on Venus |journal=Icarus |volume=57 |pages=112–124 |postscript=; |doi=10.1016/0019-1035(84)90013-7}} cited in {{cite journal | year = 2012| title = Aeolian processes on the terrestrial planets: Recent observations and future focus | hdl = 10088/17607 | journal = Progress in Physical Geography | volume = 36| pages = 110–124 | doi = 10.1177/0309133311425399 | last1 = Craddock | first1 = Robert A.| s2cid = 129491924 }}</ref> This implies that transportable sand-size particles are relatively scarce on the planet; which would be a result of very slow rates of mechanical erosion.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Craddock|first1=Robert A.|s2cid=129491924|title=Aeolian processes on the terrestrial planets: Recent observations and future focus|journal=Progress in Physical Geography|date=2011|volume=36|issue=1|pages=110–124|doi=10.1177/0309133311425399}}</ref>{{rp|p. 112}} The process that is most important for the production of sediment on Venus may be crater-forming ], which is bolstered by the seeming association between impact craters and downwind eolian land forms.<ref>Greeley, R., et al., ''Aeolian features on Venus: Preliminary Magellan results''. Journal of Geophysical Research 97(E8): 13319–13345. 1992.; cited in {{cite journal | year = 2012| title = Aeolian processes on the terrestrial planets: Recent observations and future focus | url = https://repository.si.edu/bitstream/handle/10088/17607/201280.pdf | journal = Progress in Physical Geography | volume = 36| pages = 110–124 | doi = 10.1177/0309133311425399 | last1 = Craddock | first1 = Robert A.| s2cid = 129491924 }}</ref><ref>Greeley, R., et al., 1995 ''Wind-related features and processes on Venus: Summary of Magellan results''. Icarus 115: 399–420.; cited in {{cite journal | year = 2012| title = Aeolian processes on the terrestrial planets: Recent observations and future focus | url = https://repository.si.edu/bitstream/handle/10088/17607/201280.pdf | journal = Progress in Physical Geography | volume = 36| pages = 110–124 | doi = 10.1177/0309133311425399 | last1 = Craddock | first1 = Robert A.| s2cid = 129491924 }}</ref><ref>Weitz, CM, in Ford, et al. (eds). Surface modification processes. In: ''Guide to Magellan Image Interpretation''. Pasadena, CA: NASA Jet Propulsion | |||
Laboratory. NASA-CR-194340 JPL Publication 93-24: 57–73. 1993.; cited in {{cite journal | year = 2012| title = Aeolian processes on the terrestrial planets: Recent observations and future focus | url = https://repository.si.edu/bitstream/handle/10088/17607/201280.pdf | journal = Progress in Physical Geography | volume = 36| pages = 110–124 | doi = 10.1177/0309133311425399 | last1 = Craddock | first1 = Robert A.| s2cid = 129491924 }}</ref> | |||
This process is manifest in the ejecta of impact craters expelled onto the surface of Venus. The material ejected during a ] impact is lifted to the atmosphere, where winds transport the material toward the west. As the material is deposited on the surface, it forms ]-shaped patterns. This type of deposit can be established on top of various geologic features or lava flows. Therefore, these deposits are the youngest structures on the planet. Images from ''Magellan'' reveal the existence of more than 60 of these parabola-shaped deposits that are associated with crater impacts. | |||
El activo tectonismo de Venus ha generado cinturones montañosos plegados, valles rift y terrenos de estructuras complicadas llamados ''tesserae'' (en ] ''tessera'' significa baldosa), los cuales presentan múltiples episodios de compresión y deformación tensional. | |||
The ejection material, transported by the wind, is responsible for the process of renovation of the surface at speeds, according to the measurements of the ''Venera'' soundings, of approximately one metre per second. Given the density of the lower Venusian atmosphere, the winds are more than sufficient to provoke the erosion of the surface and the transportation of fine-grained material. In the regions covered by ejection deposits one may find wind lines, dunes, and ]s. The wind lines are formed when the wind blows ejection material and volcanic ash, depositing it on top of topographic obstacles such as domes. As a consequence, the ] sides of domes are exposed to the impact of small grains that remove the surface cap. Such processes expose the material beneath, which has a different roughness, and thus different characteristics under radar, compared to formed sediment. | |||
A diferencia del caso terrestre, la deformación sobre Venus se cree que está relacionada directamente con las fuerzas dinámicas dentro del manto fluido del planeta. Los estudios gravitacionales sugieren que Venus carece de ] –una zona de baja viscosidad que en la Tierra facilita el movimiento de las placas tectónicos del ]. La ausencia de esta capa sugiere que la deformación de la superficie de Venus puede ser interpretado en términos de movimientos ] en el interior del planeta. | |||
The dunes are formed by the depositing of particulates that are the size of grains of sand and have wavy shapes. Yardangs are formed when the wind-transported material carves the fragile deposits and produces deep furrows. | |||
La deformación tectónica sobre Venus se evidencia en una variedad de escalas, las más pequeñas que han sido identificadas están relacionadas con fracturas lineales o ]s. En muchas zonas estas fallas están presentan un alineamiento paralelo en forma de red. También se encuentran pequeñas crestas montañosas discontinuas parecidas a las encontradas en la ] y ]. La presencia de tectónica extensiva manifiesta la existencia de ] (donde la roca sobre el plano de la falla se hunde respecto a la roca sobre la misma) y fracturas superficiales. Las imágenes de radar muestran que este tipo de deformación por lo general está concentrada en cinturones ubicados en zonas ecuatoriales y de altas ]es en el sur del planeta. Estas zonas abarcan cientos de kilómetros de ancho y parecen estar enlazadas por todo el planeta formando una estructura global asociada con la aparición de volcanes. | |||
The line-shaped patterns of wind associated with ]s follow a trajectory in the direction of the equator. This tendency suggests the presence of a system of circulation of ]s between medium latitudes and the equator. ''Magellan'' radar data confirm the existence of strong winds that blow toward the east in the upper surface of Venus, and ] winds on the surface. | |||
Los ]s venusianos, formados por la extensión de la ] son depresiones de decenas a cientos de metros de ancho y con extensiones de hasta 1.000 km como algunos de la Tierra. Los rifts en Venus por lo general van asociados con grandes elevaciones volcánicas con forma de domos como en Beta Regio, Atla Regio y la parte occidental de Eistla Regio. Estas tierras altas parecen ser el resultado de enormes plumas (corrientes de elevación) del manto que han causado la elevación, fracturas, creación de fallas y vulcanismo. | |||
===Chemical erosion=== | |||
La cadena montañosa más alta de Venus, Maxwell Montes en Ishtar Terra, fue formada por un proceso de compresión, extensión y movimientos laterales. Otro tipo de accidente geográfico encontrado en las tierras bajas, consiste en cinturones lineales ubicados a distancias muy próximas que se elevan a varios kilómetros sobre la superficie con amplitudes de cientos de kilómetros y longitudes de miles de kilómetros. Existen dos concentraciones importantes de estos cinturones: uno se ubica en Lavinia Planitia en altas latitudes del hemisferio sur, y el segundo se encuentra adyacente a Atalanta Planitia en las altas latitudes del hemisferio norte. | |||
Chemical and mechanical erosion of the old lava flows is caused by reactions of the surface with the atmosphere in the presence of ] and ] (see ] for details). These two gases are the planet's first and third most abundant gases, respectively; the second most abundant gas is inert ]. The reactions probably include the deterioration of ]s by carbon dioxide to produce ]s and ], as well as the deterioration of silicates by sulfur dioxide to produce ] ] and quartz. | |||
== Ancient liquid water == | |||
Los tesserae, que son terrenos de complejas crestas, se encuentran fundamentalmente en Aphrodite Terra, Alpha Regio, Tellus Regio y la parte oriental de Ishtar Terra (Fortuna). Estas regiones contienen la superposición y cortes de ]s de diferentes unidades geológicas lo que significa que son las partes más antiguas del planeta.<br> | |||
Algunos científicos creen que los tesserae pueden ser análogos a los continentes terrestres. Otros suponen que son regiones producidas por un manto en movimiento descendiente que provocó las fracturas y plegamientos para formar una espesa corteza ] o sitios de antiguas plumas del manto que crearon grandes volúmenes de lava sobre la superficie de Venus. | |||
]'s ] and others have postulated that ] may have had a shallow ocean in the past for up to 2 ] years,<ref>{{cite journal |author= Hashimoto, G. L. |author2=Roos-Serote, M. |author3=Sugita, S. |author4=Gilmore, M. S. |author5=Kamp, L. W. |author6=Carlson, R. W. |author7=Baines, K. H. |title=Felsic highland crust on Venus suggested by Galileo Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer data |journal=] |date=2008 |volume=113 |issue=E9 |doi=10.1029/2008JE003134 |pages= E00B24 |bibcode=2008JGRE..113.0B24H|doi-access= }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author=David Shiga |url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn12769-did-venuss-ancient-oceans-incubate-life.html#.UiwMq8ZMvlU |title=Did Venus's ancient oceans incubate life? |work=New Scientist |date=10 October 2007}}</ref><ref name="WV2016">{{cite journal|title=Was Venus the First Habitable World of our Solar System?|author=Michael J. Way|display-authors=etal|journal=]|date=26 August 2016|doi=10.1002/2016GL069790|pmid=28408771|pmc=5385710|volume=43 |issue = 16|pages=8376–8383|arxiv = 1608.00706 |bibcode = 2016GeoRL..43.8376W }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://climate.nasa.gov/news/2475/nasa-climate-modeling-suggests-venus-may-have-been-habitable/ |title=NASA climate modeling suggests Venus may have been habitable|author=Michael Cabbage and Leslie McCarthy|work=]|date=11 August 2016|access-date=19 November 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/hellish-venus-might-have-been-habitable-for-billions-of-years/|title=Hellish Venus Might Have Been Habitable for Billions of Years|author=Shannon Hall|work=]|date=10 August 2016|access-date=19 November 2016}}</ref> with as much water as Earth.<ref name="ESAH">{{cite web|url= http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Venus_Express/Where_did_Venus_s_water_go |title=Where did Venus's water go?|work=]|date=18 December 2008|access-date=19 November 2016}}</ref> Depending on the parameters used in their theoretical model, the last liquid water could have evaporated as recently as 715 million years ago.<ref name="WV2016" /> Currently, the only known ] is in the form of a tiny amount of ] vapor (20 ]).<ref name="Basilevsky 2003" /><ref name=Bertaux2007>{{cite journal| last=Bertaux|first=Jean-Loup| title=A warm layer in Venus' cryosphere and high-altitude measurements of HF, HCl, H2O and HDO| journal=Nature| date=2007| volume=450| pages=646–649| doi=10.1038/nature05974| bibcode=2007Natur.450..646B| pmid=18046397|issue=7170| author2=Vandaele, Ann-Carine| last3=Korablev|first3=Oleg|last4=Villard|first4=E. |last5= Fedorova|first5=A.|last6=Fussen|first6=D.|last7=Quémerais|first7=E.|last8=Belyaev|first8=D.|last9=Mahieux|first9=A. |s2cid=4421875|url=https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/29200/1/Bertaux-2007-a%20warm.pdf | display-authors=8 }}</ref> ], a component of water, is still being lost to space today as detected by ]'s ] spacecraft.<ref name="ESAH" /> | |||
==Magnetic field== | |||
==See also== | |||
<center>]</center> | |||
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==Notes== | |||
Para que un planeta posea un ] es necesario que esté formado por un núcleo de ferroso líquido como resultado de los movimientos de rotación que producen su derretimiento.<br> | |||
{{Reflist|group=note}} | |||
A pesar de que Venus posee un núcleo de ], el planeta no registra la presencia de un campo magnético. Una de las razones puede ser el peculiar movimiento de rotación. Una rotación tan lenta (unos 243 días terrestres) es probablemente la razón de su ausencia, de otro modo no cabría explicación. | |||
==References== | |||
==Corrientes de lava y canales== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
===Resources available online=== | |||
A diferencia de las coladas de lava terrestres, en Venus éstas se producen a una escala superior. Los flujos de lava venusianos alcanzan con frecuencia longitudes de cientos de kilómetros y incluso más de 1.000 en su longitud total. La amplitud de estos flujos puede alcanzar de unos pocos hasta algunas decenas kilómetros. | |||
* Grayzeck, Ed (2004). . ]. Retrieved July 11, 2005. | |||
* US Geological Survey, "". Retrieved July 13, 2005 | |||
Todavía no se sabe por qué las coladas de lava en Venus son tan grandes. Las elevadas temperaturas de 475°C que reinan en Venus disminuyen la velocidad de enfriamiento de las lavas, pero no lo suficiente para presentar semejante diferencia en longitud con respecto a las coladas terrestres.<br> | |||
* Vita-Finzi, C., Howarth, R.J., Tapper, S., and Robinson, C. (2004) "" ''Lunar and Planetary Science'' XXXV | |||
Las coladas de lava en Venus parecen ser en su mayoría de composición basáltica, por lo tanto, relativamente más fluidas. Dentro de las lavas basálticas, en la Tierra se conocen de dos tipos: ] y ]. La lava aa presenta una textura rugosa en forma de pequeños bloques fragmentados. La lava cordada, como su nombre lo indica, se presenta como una capa de cuerdas o de estilo almohadillado. | |||
* ], Hamilton, V.E., Janes, D.M., and Smrekar, S.E. (1997) "" ''Venus II'' Bougher et al., eds., University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1997 | |||
La rugosidad del terreno se representa en el brillo de las imágenes de radar (las superficies más suaves son más oscuras) y sirven para determinar las diferencias de las lavas aa y las cordadas. Estas variaciones también pueden reflejar las diferencias en edad y el estado de preservación. Los canales y los ] (canales que se han enfriado y se ha creado un techo encima) son muy comunes en Venus. | |||
La mayor parte de los campos de flujos están asociados a volcanes. Los volcanes centrales están rodeados por extensas coladas que forman el edificio del volcán. Por otra parte, también se relacionan a cráteres de fisura, coronas, densos cúmulos de domos volcánicos, conos, pozos y canales. | |||
Gracias a ''Magellan'' se identificaron más de 200 canales y complejos de valles. Los canales fueron clasificados como canales simples, canales complejos o canales compuestos.<br> | |||
Los canales simples se caracterizan por estar formados por un largo y único canal principal. La categoría incluye a los ]es similares a los observados en la Luna, y un nuevo tipo llamado ''canali'', que corresponden a canales individuales muy largos que mantienen su amplitud a lo largo de su longitud. El canali más largo que ha sido identificado tiene una longitud de más de 7.000 km.<br> | |||
Los canales complejos incluyen redes ] además de redes de distribución. Este tipo de canales ha sido observado en asociación con varios cráteres de impacto y en importantes inundaciones de lava asociadas a campos de flujo muy importantes.<br> | |||
Los canales compuestos están constituidos por segmentos simples y complejos. El mayor de estos canales presenta una red anastomosada y colinas modificadas como las presentes en Marte. | |||
A pesar de los innumerables cráteres encontrados en su superficie, no se han encontrado indicios de que el agua fuera el origen de éstos. De hecho no hay evidencia de que el agua fuera estable en los últimos 600 millones de años en la atmósfera y superficie de Venus que tiene entre 200 y 600 millones de años. | |||
Con respecto a la formación de los espectaculares canales, hay dos candidatos: lava y los fluidos de los deyectos de impacto. Las características de estas corrientes de lava son muy inusuales, tal vez la caliente superficie de Venus ayude a la erosión térmica. Por otra parte, es probable que existan fluidos de lava con muy baja viscosidad como basaltos con un alto contenido de ] y ] o incluso lavas de ] o ]. La interacción de los deyectos de impacto han creado grandes fluidos que se extienden por cientos de kilómetros y tienen morfologías típicas de canales. | |||
==Procesos superficiales== | |||
En Venus no existe el agua y por lo tanto el único proceso ] de esperarse es la interacción producida por la atmósfera con la superficie. Esta interacción se hace presente en los deyectos de los cráteres de impacto, los cuales han sido expulsados a lo largo de la superficie. Los materiales excavados durante el impacto de un ] son levantados hasta la parte superior de la atmósfera donde los vientos los transportan en dirección oeste y a medida que el deyecto se deposita en la superficie va formando patrones parabólicos (Figura 14). Este tipo de depósitos puede establecerse encima de varias unidades geológicas o coladas de lavas y por lo tanto son las estructuras más jóvenes del planeta. Las imágenes de ''Magellan'' revelan la existencia de más de 60 de estos depósitos parabólicos asociados con cráteres de impacto. | |||
<div style="float:right;margin:0 0 1em 1em;text-align:center;">]<br>Figura 14 ]</div> | |||
El material de los deyectos transportados por el viento es el responsable del proceso de renovación de la superficie con velocidades, de acuerdo a mediciones de las sondas ''Venera'', de aproximadamente 1 metro por segundo. Dada la densidad de la atmósfera inferior de Venus, los vientos son más que suficientes para provocar la erosión de la superficie y el transporte de material de grano fino. En las regiones cubiertas por depósitos de deyectos se pueden encontrar líneas de viento, dunas y ]s. Las líneas de vientos se forman cuando este sopla las partículas de los deyectos y las cenizas de los volcanes depositados sobre obstáculos topográficos como los domos. Como consecuencia, el ] de los domos está expuesto al impacto de pequeños granos que remueven la capa superficial exponiendo el material inferior con diferentes características de rugosidad (con diferentes características en el radar) si se las compara con el ] formado. | |||
Las dunas se forman por la deposición de partículas del tamaño de granos de arena y tienen formas onduladas. Los yardangs se forman cuando el material transportado por el viento esculpe los frágiles depósitos y produce profundos surcos. | |||
Los patrones lineales del viento asociados con ]es de impacto siguen una trayectoria en dirección hacia el ecuador. Esta tendencia sugiere la presencia de un sistema de circulación de ] dentro las latitudes medias y ecuatoriales. Los datos de radar de ''Magellan'' confirman la existencia de fuertes vientos que soplan hacia el este en la parte superior de la superficie de Venus y vientos meridionales en la superficie. | |||
<center>]</center> | |||
El proceso de ] en Venus ha actuado por los últimos cientos de millones de años. Se puede observar la superposición de coladas de lava. Las más antiguas cubiertas por las más recientes presentan distintas intensidades de reflexión al radar. Las más antiguas reflejan menos que las planicies que las rodean. Los datos de ''Magellan'' muestran que las coladas más recientes tienen una semejanza a las de tipo de lava aa y las cordadas. Sin embargo, las coladas más antiguas son más oscuras y se parecen a los depósitos de regiones áridas de la Tierra que han sufrido los efectos de la meteorización. | |||
La causa de la erosión química y mecánica de las antiguas coladas de lava es atribuida a reacciones de la superficie con la atmósfera bajo la presencia de ] y ]. Estos dos gases son el primero y el tercero más abundantes respectivamente; el segundo más abundante es el ] inerte. Probablemente las reacciones incluyen el deterioro de los ]s a través del dióxido de carbono para producir ]s y ] y por el dióxido de sulfuro que produce ] (sulfato de calcio) y dióxido carbono. | |||
Una de las características más interesantes de las imágenes de radar es la disminución de la reflexión a medida que la altura aumenta y exhibe valores extremadamente bajos por encima del radio de cerca de 6.054 km. Este cambio se relaciona con una disminución en la emisitividad. Este patrón de reflexión debe estar relacionado a la disminución de la ] a medida que la altitud aumenta. | |||
Existen varias hipótesis que explican las características inusuales de la superficie de Venus. Una idea es que la superficie consiste en suelo suelto con huecos de vacío en forma esférica que producen una eficiente reflexión al radar. Otra idea es que la superficie no es suave y que está cubierta por un material que tiene una ] extremadamente alta. Otra teoría dice que la capa de un metro sobre la superficie está formada por hojuelas de un material conductivo como la ].<br> | |||
Por último, un modelo reciente supone la existencia de una pequeña proporción de un ] ].<br> | |||
Los minerales ferroeléctricos exhiben una propiedad única a elevadas temperaturas, la constante dieléctrica muestra un abrupto incremento y a medida que la temperatura sigue aumentando, la constante dieléctrica vuelve a sus valores normales. Los minerales que podrían explicar este comportamiento sobre la superficie de Venus serían ] y los ]s. | |||
A pesar de estas teorías, la existencia de minerales ferroeléctricos sobre Venus no ha sido confirmada. Sólo la exploración ''in situ'' permitirán dilucidar los enigmas que han quedado sin resolver. | |||
==References== | |||
*This article draws heavily on the ] in the Spanish-language Misplaced Pages, which was accessed in the version of ], ]. | |||
===Publications=== | ===Publications=== | ||
*''The Face of Venus. The Magellan Radar Mapping Mission'', by Ladislav E. Roth and Stephen D. Wall. NASA Special Publication, Washington, D.C. June 1995 (SP-520). | *''The Face of Venus. The Magellan Radar Mapping Mission'', by Ladislav E. Roth and Stephen D. Wall. NASA Special Publication, Washington, D.C. June 1995 (SP-520). | ||
*"Estrella del atardecer", ''El Universo, Enciclopedia de la Astronomía y el Espacio'', Editorial Planeta-De Agostini, págs. 161-167. Tomo 1 (1997). | |||
*''Ciencias de la Tierra. Una Introducción a la Geología Física'', de Edward J. Tarbuck y Frederick K. Lutgens. Prentice Hall (1999). | |||
*Fotografías: | |||
===Related books=== | ===Related books=== | ||
*''Surface Modification on Venus as Inferred from Magellan Observations on Plains'', |
*''Surface Modification on Venus as Inferred from Magellan Observations on Plains'', by R. E. Ardvison, R. Greeley, M. C. Malin, R. S. Saunders, N. R. Izenberg, J. J. Plaut, E. R. Stofan, and M. K. Shepard. Geophisics Research 97, 13.303. (1992) | ||
*''The Magellan Imaging Radar Mission to Venus'', |
*''The Magellan Imaging Radar Mission to Venus'', by W. T. K. Johnson. Proc. IEEE 79, 777. (1991) | ||
*''Planetary Landscapes, 3rd Edition |
*''Planetary Landscapes'', 3rd Edition, by R. Greeley. Chapman & Hall. (1994) | ||
*''Venus – the geological story'', 1st edition, by Peter Cattermole.UCL Press. (1994). | |||
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* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161230123206/https://webgis.wr.usgs.gov/pigwad/down/venus_topo.htm |date=2016-12-30 }} | |||
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Geological structure and composition of VenusThis article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Geology of Venus" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (February 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
The geology of Venus is the scientific study of the surface, crust, and interior of the planet Venus. Within the Solar System, it is the one nearest to Earth and most like it in terms of mass, but has no magnetic field or recognizable plate tectonic system. Much of the ground surface is exposed volcanic bedrock, some with thin and patchy layers of soil covering, in marked contrast with Earth, the Moon, and Mars. Some impact craters are present, but Venus is similar to Earth in that there are fewer craters than on the other rocky planets that are largely covered by them. This is due in part to the thickness of the Venusian atmosphere disrupting small impactors before they strike the ground, but the paucity of large craters may be due to volcanic re-surfacing, possibly of a catastrophic nature. Volcanism appears to be the dominant agent of geological change on Venus. Some of the volcanic landforms appear to be unique to the planet. There are shield and composite volcanoes similar to those found on Earth, although these volcanoes are significantly shorter than those found on Earth or Mars. Given that Venus has approximately the same size, density, and composition as Earth, it is plausible that volcanism may be continuing on the planet today, as demonstrated by recent studies.
Most of the Venusian surface is relatively flat; it is divided into three topographic units: lowlands, highlands, and plains. In the early days of radar observation the highlands drew comparisons to the continents of Earth, but modern research has shown that this is superficial and the absence of plate tectonics makes this comparison misleading. Tectonic features are present to a limited extent, including linear "deformation belts" composed of folds and faults. These may be caused by mantle convection. Many of the tectonic features such as tesserae (large regions of highly deformed terrain, folded and fractured in two or three dimensions), and arachnoids (those features resembling a spider's web) are associated with volcanism.
Eolian landforms are not widespread on the planet's surface, but there is considerable evidence the planet's atmosphere causes the chemical weathering of rock, especially at high elevations. The planet is remarkably dry, with only a chemical trace of water vapor (20 ppm) in the Venusian atmosphere. No landforms indicative of past water or ice are visible in radar images of the surface. The atmosphere shows isotopic evidence of having been stripped of volatile elements by off-gassing and solar wind erosion over time, implying the possibility that Venus may have had liquid water at some point in the distant past; no direct evidence for this has been found. Much speculation about the geological history of Venus continues today.
The surface of Venus is not easily accessible because of the extremely thick atmosphere (some 90 times that of Earth's) and the 470 °C (878 °F) surface temperature. Much of what is known about it stems from orbital radar observations, because the surface is permanently obscured in visible wavelengths by cloud cover. In addition, a number of landers have returned data from the surface, including images.
Studies reported in October 2023 suggest for the first time that Venus may have had plate tectonics during ancient times and, as a result, may have had a more habitable environment, possibly once capable of harboring life forms.
Topography
Main article: Mapping of VenusThe surface of Venus is comparatively flat. When 93% of the topography was mapped by Pioneer Venus Orbiter, scientists found that the total distance from the lowest point to the highest point on the entire surface was about 13 kilometres (8.1 mi), about the same as the vertical distance between the Earth's ocean floor and the higher summits of the Himalayas. This similarity is to be expected as the maximum attainable elevation contrasts on a planet are largely dictated by the strength of the planet's gravity and the mechanical strength of its lithosphere, these are similar for Earth and Venus.
According to data from the Pioneer Venus Orbiter altimeters, nearly 51% of the surface is located within 500 meters (1,600 feet) of the median radius of 6,052 km (3,761 mi); only 2% of the surface is located at elevations greater than 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) from the median radius.
The altimetry experiment of Magellan confirmed the general character of the landscape. According to the Magellan data, 80% of the topography is within 1 km (0.62 mi) of the median radius. The most important elevations are in the mountain chains that surround Lakshmi Planum: Maxwell Montes (11 km, 6.8 mi), Akna Montes (7 km, 4.3 mi) and Freya Montes (7 km, 4.3 mi). Despite the relatively flat landscape of Venus, the altimetry data also found large inclined plains. Such is the case on the southwest side of Maxwell Montes, which in some parts seems to be inclined some 45°. Inclinations of 30° were registered in Danu Montes and Themis Regio.
About 75% of the surface is composed of bare rock.
Based on altimeter data from the Pioneer Venus Orbiter probe, supported by Magellan data, the topography of the planet is divided into three provinces: lowlands, deposition plains, and highlands.
Highlands
This unit covers about 10% of the planet's surface, with elevations greater than 2 km (1.2 mi). The largest provinces of the highlands are Aphrodite Terra, Ishtar Terra, and Lada Terra, as well as the regions Beta Regio, Phoebe Regio and Themis Regio. The regions Alpha Regio, Bell Regio, Eistla Regio and Tholus Regio are smaller regions of highlands.
Some of the terrain in these areas is particularly efficient at reflecting radar signals. This is possibly analogous to snow lines on Earth and is likely related to temperatures and pressures there being lower than in the other provinces due to the higher elevation, which allows for distinct mineralogy to occur. It is thought that high-elevation rock formations may contain or be coated by minerals that have high dielectric constants. The high dielectric minerals would be stable at the ambient temperatures in the highlands, but not on the plains that comprise the rest of the planet's surface. Pyrite, an iron sulfide, matches these criteria and is widely suspected as a possible cause; it would be produced by chemical weathering of the volcanic highlands after long-term exposure to the sulfur-bearing Venusian atmosphere. The presence of pyrite on Venus has been contested, with atmospheric modeling showing that it might not be stable under Venusian atmospheric conditions. Other hypotheses have been put forward to explain the higher radar reflectivity in the highlands, including the presence of a ferroelectric material whose dielectric constant changes with temperature (with Venus having a changing temperature gradient with elevation). It has been observed that the character of the radar-bright highlands is not consistent across the surface of Venus. For example, Maxwell Montes shows the sharp, snow line-like change in reflectivity that is consistent with a change in mineralogy, whereas Ovda Regio shows a more gradual brightening upwards trend. The brightening upwards trend on Ovda Regio is consistent with a ferroelectric signature, and has been suggested to indicate the presence of chlorapatite.
Deposition plains
Deposition plains have elevations averaging 0 to 2 km and cover more than half of the planet's surface.
Lowlands
The rest of the surface is lowlands and generally lies below zero elevation. Radar reflectivity data suggest that at a centimeter scale these areas are smooth, as a result of gradation (accumulation of fine material eroded from the highlands).
Surface observations
Ten spacecraft have successfully landed on Venus and returned data; all were flown by the Soviet Union. Venera 9, 10, 13, and 14 had cameras and returned images of soil and rock. Spectrophotometry results showed that these four missions kicked up dust clouds on landing, which means that some of the dust particles must be smaller than about 0.02 mm. The rocks at all four sites showed fine layers, some layers were more reflective than others. Experiments on rocks at the Venera 13 and 14 sites found that they were porous and easily crushed (bearing maximum loads of 0.3 to 1 MPa) these rocks may be weakly lithified sediments or volcanic tuff. Spectrometry found that the surface materials at the Venera 9, 10, 14 and Vega 1 and 2 landing had chemical compositions similar to tholeiitic basalts, while the Venera 8 and 13 sites chemically resembled alkaline basalts.
Impact craters and age estimates of the surface
Earth-based radar surveys made it possible to identify some topographic patterns related to craters, and the Venera 15 and Venera 16 probes identified almost 150 such features of probable impact origin. Global coverage from Magellan subsequently made it possible to identify nearly 900 impact craters.
Compared to Mercury, the Moon and other such bodies, Venus has very few craters. In part, this is because Venus's dense atmosphere burns up smaller meteorites before they hit the surface. The Venera and Magellan data are in agreement: there are very few impact craters with a diameter less than 30 kilometres (19 mi), and data from Magellan show an absence of any craters less than 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) in diameter. The small craters are irregular and appear in groups, thus pointing to the deceleration and the breakup of impactors. However, there are also fewer of the large craters, and those appear relatively young; they are rarely filled with lava, showing that they were formed after volcanic activity in the area ceased, and radar data indicates that they are rough and have not had time to be eroded down.
Compared to the situation on bodies such as the Moon, it is more difficult to determine the ages of different areas of the surface on Venus, on the basis of crater counts, due to the small number of craters at hand. However, the surface characteristics are consistent with a completely random distribution, implying that the surface of the entire planet is roughly the same age, or at least that very large areas are not very different in age from the average.
Taken together, this evidence suggests that the surface of Venus is geologically young. The impact crater distribution appears to be most consistent with models that call for a near-complete resurfacing of the planet. Subsequent to this period of extreme activity, process rates declined and impact craters began to accumulate, with only minor modification and resurfacing since.
A young surface all created at the same time is a different situation compared with any of the other terrestrial planets.
Global resurfacing event
Age estimates based on crater counts indicate a young surface, in contrast to the much older surfaces of Mars, Mercury, and the Moon. For this to be the case on a planet without crustal recycling by plate tectonics requires explanation. One hypothesis is that Venus underwent some sort of global resurfacing about 300–500 million years ago that erased the evidence of older craters.
One possible explanation for this event is that it is part of a cyclic process on Venus. On Earth, plate tectonics allows heat to escape from the mantle by advection, the transport of mantle material to the surface and the return of old crust to the mantle. But Venus has no evidence of plate tectonics, so this theory states that the interior of the planet heats up (due to the decay of radioactive elements) until material in the mantle is hot enough to force its way to the surface. The subsequent resurfacing event covers most or all of the planet with lava, until the mantle is cool enough for the process to start over.
Volcanoes
Main article: Volcanism on VenusThe surface of Venus is dominated by volcanism. Although Venus is superficially similar to Earth, it seems that the tectonic plates so active in Earth's geology do not exist on Venus. About 80% of the planet consists of a mosaic of volcanic lava plains, dotted with more than a hundred large isolated shield volcanoes, and many hundreds of smaller volcanoes and volcanic constructs such as coronae. These are geological features believed to be almost unique to Venus: huge, ring-shaped structures 100–300 kilometers (62–186 miles) across and rising hundreds of meters above the surface. The only other place they have been discovered is on Uranus's moon Miranda. It is believed that they are formed when plumes of rising hot material in the mantle push the crust upwards into a dome shape, which then collapses in the centre as the molten lava cools and leaks out at the sides, leaving a crown-like structure: the corona.
Differences can be seen in volcanic deposits. In many cases, volcanic activity is localized to a fixed source, and deposits are found in the vicinity of this source. This kind of volcanism is called "centralized volcanism," in that volcanoes and other geographic features form distinct regions. The second type of volcanic activity is not radial or centralized; flood basalts cover wide expanses of the surface, similar to features such as the Deccan Traps on Earth. These eruptions result in "flow type" volcanoes.
Volcanoes less than 20 kilometres (12 mi) in diameter are very abundant on Venus and they may number hundreds of thousands or even millions. Many appear as flattened domes or 'pancakes', thought to be formed in a similar way to shield volcanoes on Earth. These pancake dome volcanoes are fairly round features that are less than 1-kilometre (0.62 mi) in height and many times that in width. It is common to find groups of hundreds of these volcanoes in areas called shield fields. The domes of Venus are between 10 and 100 times larger than those formed on Earth. They are usually associated with "coronae" and tesserae. The pancakes are thought to be formed by highly viscous, silica-rich lava erupting under Venus's high atmospheric pressure. Domes called scalloped margin domes (commonly called ticks because they appear as domes with numerous legs), are thought to have undergone mass wasting events such as landslides on their margins. Sometimes deposits of debris can be seen scattered around them.
On Venus, volcanoes are mainly of the shield type. Nevertheless, the morphology of the shield volcanoes of Venus is different from shield volcanoes on Earth. On the Earth, shield volcanoes can be a few tens of kilometers wide and up to 10 kilometers high (6.2 mi) in the case of Mauna Kea, measured from the sea floor. On Venus, these volcanoes can cover hundreds of kilometers in area, but they are relatively flat, with an average height of 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi).
Other unique features of Venus's surface are novae (radial networks of dikes or grabens) and arachnoids. A nova is formed when large quantities of magma are extruded onto the surface to form radiating ridges and trenches which are highly reflective to radar. These dikes form a symmetrical network around the central point where the lava emerged, where there may also be a depression caused by the collapse of the magma chamber.
Arachnoids are so named because they resemble a spider's web, featuring several concentric ovals surrounded by a complex network of radial fractures similar to those of a nova. It is not known whether the 250 or so features identified as arachnoids actually share a common origin, or are the result of different geological processes.
Tectonic activity
Despite the fact that Venus appears to have no global plate tectonic system as such, the planet's surface shows various features associated with local tectonic activity. Features such as faults, folds, and volcanoes are present there and may be driven largely by processes in the mantle.
The active volcanism of Venus has generated chains of folded mountains, rift valleys, and terrain known as tesserae, a word meaning "floor tiles" in Greek. Tesserae exhibit the effects of eons of compression and tensional deformation.
Unlike those on Earth, the deformations on Venus are directly related to regional dynamic forces within the planet's mantle. Gravitational studies suggest that Venus differs from Earth in lacking an asthenosphere—a layer of lower viscosity and mechanical weakness that allows Earth's crustal tectonic plates to move. The apparent absence of this layer on Venus suggests that the deformation of the Venusian surface must be explained by convective movements within the planet's mantle.
The tectonic deformations on Venus occur on a variety of scales, the smallest of which are related to linear fractures or faults. In many areas these faults appear as networks of parallel lines. Small, discontinuous mountain crests are found which resemble those on the Moon and Mars. The effects of extensive tectonism are shown by the presence of normal faults, where the crust has sunk in one area relative to the surrounding rock, and superficial fractures. Radar imaging shows that these types of deformation are concentrated in belts located in the equatorial zones and at high southern latitudes. These belts are hundreds of kilometers wide and appear to interconnect across the whole of the planet, forming a global network associated with the distribution of volcanoes.
The rifts of Venus, formed by the expansion of the lithosphere, are groups of depressions tens to hundreds of meters wide and extending up to 1,000 km (620 mi) in length. The rifts are mostly associated with large volcanic elevations in the form of domes, such as those at Beta Regio, Atla Regio and the western part of Eistla Regio. These highlands seem to be the result of enormous mantle plumes (rising currents of magma) which have caused elevation, fracturing, faulting, and volcanism.
The highest mountain chain on Venus, Maxwell Montes in Ishtar Terra, was formed by processes of compression, expansion, and lateral movement. Another type of geographical feature, found in the lowlands, consists of ridge belts elevated several meters above the surface, hundreds of kilometers wide and thousands of kilometers long. Two major concentrations of these belts exist: one in Lavinia Planitia near the southern pole, and the second adjacent to Atalanta Planitia near the northern pole.
Tesserae are found mainly in Aphrodite Terra, Alpha Regio, Tellus Regio and the eastern part of Ishtar Terra (Fortuna Tessera). These regions contain the superimposition and intersection of grabens of different geological units, indicating that these are the oldest parts of the planet. It was once thought that the tesserae were continents associated with tectonic plates like those of the Earth; in reality they are probably the result of floods of basaltic lava forming large plains, which were then subjected to intense tectonic fracturing.
Nonetheless, studies reported on 26 October 2023 suggest that Venus, for the first time, may have had plate tectonics during ancient times. As a result, Venus may have had a more habitable environment, and possibly once capable of life forms.
Magnetic field and internal structure
Venus's crust appears to be 20–25 kilometres (12–16 mi) thick on average, and composed of mafic silicate rocks. Venus's mantle is approximately 2,840 kilometres (1,760 mi) thick, its chemical composition is probably similar to that of chondrites. Since Venus is a terrestrial planet, it is presumed to have a core, made of semisolid iron and nickel with a radius of approximately 3,000 kilometres (1,900 mi).
The unavailability of seismic data from Venus severely limits what can be definitely known about the structure of the planet's mantle, but models of Earth's mantle have been modified to make predictions. It is expected that the uppermost mantle, from about 70 to 480 kilometres (43 to 298 mi) deep is mostly made of the mineral olivine. Descending through the mantle, the chemical composition remains largely the same but at somewhere between about 480 and 760 kilometres (300 and 470 mi), the increasing pressure causes the crystal structure of olivine to change to the more densely packed structure of spinel. Another transition occurs between 760 and 1,000 kilometres (470 and 620 mi) deep, where the material takes on the progressively more compact crystal structures of ilmenite and perovskite, and gradually becomes more like perovskite until the core boundary is reached.
Venus is similar to Earth in size and density, and so probably also in bulk composition, but it does not have a significant magnetic field. Earth's magnetic field is produced by what is known as the core dynamo, consisting of an electrically conducting liquid, the nickel-iron outer core that rotates and is convecting. Venus is expected to have an electrically conductive core of similar composition, and although its rotation period is very long (243.7 Earth days), simulations show that this is adequate to produce a dynamo. This implies that Venus lacks convection in its outer core. Convection occurs when there is a large difference in temperature between the inner and outer part of the core, but since Venus has no plate tectonics to let off heat from the mantle, it is possible that outer core convection is being suppressed by a warm mantle. It is also possible that Venus may lack a solid inner core for the same reason, if the core is either too hot or is not under enough pressure to allow molten nickel-iron to freeze there.
Lava flows and channels
Lava flows on Venus are often much larger than Earth's, up to several hundred kilometers long and tens of kilometers wide. It is still unknown why these lava fields or lobate flows reach such sizes, but it is suggested that they are the result of very large eruptions of basaltic, low-viscosity lava spreading out to form wide, flat plains.
On Earth, there are two known types of basaltic lava: ʻaʻa and pāhoehoe. ʻAʻa lava presents a rough texture in the shape of broken blocks (clinkers). Pāhoehoe lava is recognized by its pillowy or ropy appearance. Rough surfaces appear bright in radar images, which can be used to determine the differences between ʻaʻa and pāhoehoe lavas. These variations can also reflect differences in lava age and preservation. Channels and lava tubes (channels that have cooled down and over which a dome has formed) are very common on Venus. Two planetary astronomers from the University of Wollongong in Australia, Dr Graeme Melville and Prof. Bill Zealey, researched these lava tubes, using data supplied by NASA, over a number of years and concluded that they were widespread and up to ten times the size of those on the Earth. Melville and Zealey said that the gigantic size of the Venusian lava tubes (tens of meters wide and hundreds of kilometers long) may be explained by the very fluid lava flows together with the high temperatures on Venus, allowing the lava to cool slowly.
For the most part, lava flow fields are associated with volcanoes. The central volcanoes are surrounded by extensive flows that form the core of the volcano. They are also related to fissure craters, coronae, dense clusters of volcanic domes, cones, wells and channels.
Thanks to Magellan, more than 200 channels and valley complexes have been identified. The channels were classified as simple, complex, or compound. Simple channels are characterized by a single, long main channel. This category includes rills similar to those found on the Moon, and a new type, called canali, consisting of long, distinct channels which maintain their width throughout their entire course. The longest such channel identified (Baltis Vallis) has a length of more than 6,800 kilometres (4,200 mi), about one-sixth of the circumference of the planet.
Complex channels include anastomosed networks, in addition to distribution networks. This type of channel has been observed in association with several impact craters and important lava floods related to major lava flow fields. Compound channels are made of both simple and complex segments. The largest of these channels shows an anastomosed web and modified hills similar to those present on Mars.
Although the shape of these channels is highly suggestive of fluid erosion, there is no evidence that they were formed by water. In fact, there is no evidence of water anywhere on Venus in the last 600 million years. While the most popular theory for the channels' formation is that they are the result of thermal erosion by lava, there are other hypotheses, including that they were formed by heated fluids formed and ejected during impacts.
Surface processes
Wind
Liquid water and ice are nonexistent on Venus, and thus the only agent of physical erosion to be found (apart from thermal erosion by lava flows) is wind. Wind tunnel experiments have shown that the density of the atmosphere allows the transport of sediments with even a small breeze. Therefore, the seeming rarity of eolian land forms must have some other cause. This implies that transportable sand-size particles are relatively scarce on the planet; which would be a result of very slow rates of mechanical erosion. The process that is most important for the production of sediment on Venus may be crater-forming impact events, which is bolstered by the seeming association between impact craters and downwind eolian land forms.
This process is manifest in the ejecta of impact craters expelled onto the surface of Venus. The material ejected during a meteorite impact is lifted to the atmosphere, where winds transport the material toward the west. As the material is deposited on the surface, it forms parabola-shaped patterns. This type of deposit can be established on top of various geologic features or lava flows. Therefore, these deposits are the youngest structures on the planet. Images from Magellan reveal the existence of more than 60 of these parabola-shaped deposits that are associated with crater impacts.
The ejection material, transported by the wind, is responsible for the process of renovation of the surface at speeds, according to the measurements of the Venera soundings, of approximately one metre per second. Given the density of the lower Venusian atmosphere, the winds are more than sufficient to provoke the erosion of the surface and the transportation of fine-grained material. In the regions covered by ejection deposits one may find wind lines, dunes, and yardangs. The wind lines are formed when the wind blows ejection material and volcanic ash, depositing it on top of topographic obstacles such as domes. As a consequence, the leeward sides of domes are exposed to the impact of small grains that remove the surface cap. Such processes expose the material beneath, which has a different roughness, and thus different characteristics under radar, compared to formed sediment.
The dunes are formed by the depositing of particulates that are the size of grains of sand and have wavy shapes. Yardangs are formed when the wind-transported material carves the fragile deposits and produces deep furrows.
The line-shaped patterns of wind associated with impact craters follow a trajectory in the direction of the equator. This tendency suggests the presence of a system of circulation of Hadley cells between medium latitudes and the equator. Magellan radar data confirm the existence of strong winds that blow toward the east in the upper surface of Venus, and meridional winds on the surface.
Chemical erosion
Chemical and mechanical erosion of the old lava flows is caused by reactions of the surface with the atmosphere in the presence of carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide (see carbonate–silicate cycle for details). These two gases are the planet's first and third most abundant gases, respectively; the second most abundant gas is inert nitrogen. The reactions probably include the deterioration of silicates by carbon dioxide to produce carbonates and quartz, as well as the deterioration of silicates by sulfur dioxide to produce anhydrate calcium sulfate and quartz.
Ancient liquid water
NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and others have postulated that Venus may have had a shallow ocean in the past for up to 2 billion years, with as much water as Earth. Depending on the parameters used in their theoretical model, the last liquid water could have evaporated as recently as 715 million years ago. Currently, the only known water on Venus is in the form of a tiny amount of atmospheric vapor (20 ppm). Hydrogen, a component of water, is still being lost to space today as detected by ESA's Venus Express spacecraft.
See also
- Geodynamics of Venus
- Venus snow
- Magellan
- Venera program
- Vega program
- Pioneer Venus Orbiter
- Venus Express
- List of craters on Venus
- List of extraterrestrial dune fields
- List of mountains on Venus
- List of geological features on Venus
Notes
- On Venus, for every kilometer of gain in elevation, the average temperature drops by about 8 K, so that the average temperature difference between the top of Maxwell Montes and the lowest basins is about 100 K. This dwarfs the average differences in temperature due to latitudes as well as the day-side and night-side temperature differences, both of which are hardly more than 2 K.
- 0.3 MPa is about the amount of pressure exerted by water flowing out of a typical garden hose. 1 MPa is just under the pressure of the average human bite.
- Dating geological formations by crater counting is a long established and relatively inexpensive mainstay of planetary science. No rock from Venus has ever been dated using laboratory methods, as no meteorites from Venus are known and no spacecraft have ever returned samples from the planet to the Earth. The planet's considerable gravity and thick atmosphere mean this is unlikely to change in the near future.
- But note the contrast: shield volcanism on Earth is associated with low viscosity lava, whereas Venusian domes are caused by very high viscosity, gummy lavas.
- If there is no gradually freezing inner core, then there is no release of the latent heat of crystallization there to steepen the temperature gradient and increase convection.
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Resources available online
- Grayzeck, Ed (2004). Venus Fact Sheet. NASA. Retrieved July 11, 2005.
- US Geological Survey, "Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature (Venus)". Retrieved July 13, 2005
- Vita-Finzi, C., Howarth, R.J., Tapper, S., and Robinson, C. (2004) "Venusian Craters and the Origin of Coronae" Lunar and Planetary Science XXXV
- Stofan, E.R., Hamilton, V.E., Janes, D.M., and Smrekar, S.E. (1997) "Coronae on Venus: Morphology and Origin" Venus II Bougher et al., eds., University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1997
Publications
- The Face of Venus. The Magellan Radar Mapping Mission, by Ladislav E. Roth and Stephen D. Wall. NASA Special Publication, Washington, D.C. June 1995 (SP-520).
Related books
- Surface Modification on Venus as Inferred from Magellan Observations on Plains, by R. E. Ardvison, R. Greeley, M. C. Malin, R. S. Saunders, N. R. Izenberg, J. J. Plaut, E. R. Stofan, and M. K. Shepard. Geophisics Research 97, 13.303. (1992)
- The Magellan Imaging Radar Mission to Venus, by W. T. K. Johnson. Proc. IEEE 79, 777. (1991)
- Planetary Landscapes, 3rd Edition, by R. Greeley. Chapman & Hall. (1994)
- Venus – the geological story, 1st edition, by Peter Cattermole.UCL Press. (1994).
External links
- The Soviet Exploration of Venus
- Catalog of Soviet Venus images
- Past missions – Mariner 10
- The Voyage of Mariner 10
- Magellan mission to Venus
- Online resources of the Magellan mission to Venus
- Guide for the interpretation of the images taken by Magellan
- National Space Science Data Center's Page on Venus (NASA)
- USGS maps of Venus
- NASA/USGS Planetary Geologic Mapping Program
- Stereo-Derived Topography for Venus Archived 2019-06-21 at the Wayback Machine
- Venus Topographic Downloads Archived 2016-12-30 at the Wayback Machine
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