When the NASA Mariner 10 spacecraft drifted away from Venus in February 1974, it captured an image of a planet cloaked in serene, swirling clouds. To the casual observer, it looked like a portrait of celestial tranquility—a bright, inviting jewel in our solar system. However, appearances can be deceiving. Beneath that pale, reflective veil lies an absolute inferno: a world of blistering heat, atmospheric pressures that would crush a submarine like a soda can, and clouds composed of highly aggressive sulfuric acid. Venus is Earth's "evil twin," a cautionary tale of planetary evolution gone wrong. Yet, beyond its hostile weather, Venus hides a deeper, more profound mystery that has perplexed planetary scientists for generations: why does it spin the wrong way? -Phys.org . While most planets in our solar system rotate in the same direction they orbit the Sun, Venus performs a sluggish, retrograde pirouette. Now, a groundbreaking study presented at the European Geosciences...
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