Surface composition

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Successful final Parker Solar Probe flyby of Venus yesterday Nov. 8, 2024, 1:24 AM ET (EarthSky)

A number of the Soviet landers carried instruments to analyze the chemical composition of the surface materials of Venus. Because only the relative proportions of a few elements were measured, no definitive information exists concerning the rock types or minerals present. Two techniques were used to measure the abundances of various elements. Gamma-ray spectrometers, which were carried on Veneras 8, 9, and 10 and the landers of the Soviet Vega 1 and 2 missions, measured the concentrations of naturally radioactive isotopes of the elements uranium, potassium, and thorium. X-ray fluorescence instruments, carried on Veneras 13 and 14 and Vega 2, measured the concentrations of a number of major elements.

The Venera 8 site gave indications that the rock composition may be similar to that of granite or other igneous rocks that compose Earth’s continents. This inference, however, was based only on rather uncertain measurements of the concentrations of a few radioactive elements. Measurements of radioactive elements at the Venera 9 and 10 and Vega 1 and 2 landing sites suggested that the compositions there resemble those of basalt rocks found on Earth’s ocean floors and in some volcanic regions such as Hawaii and Iceland. The Venera 13 and 14 and Vega 2 X-ray instruments measured concentrations of silicon, aluminum, magnesium, iron, calcium, potassium, titanium, manganese, and sulfur. Although some differences in composition were seen among the three sites, on the whole the elemental compositions measured by all three landers were similar to those of basalts on Earth.

A surprising result of orbital radar observations of Venus is that the highest elevations on the planet exhibit anomalously high radar reflectivity. The best interpretation seems to be that the highest elevations are coated with a thin layer of some semiconducting material. Its composition is unknown, but it could be an iron-containing mineral such as pyrite or magnetite, which formed at cooler, higher elevations from low concentrations of atmospheric iron(II) chloride vapour in the atmosphere.

Surface features

Earth-based observatories and Venus-orbiting spacecraft have provided global-scale information on the nature of the planet’s surface. All have used radar systems to penetrate the thick Venusian clouds.

The entire surface of the planet is dry and rocky. Because there is no sea level in the literal sense, elevation is commonly expressed as a planetary radius—i.e., as the distance from the centre of the planet to the surface at a given location. Another method, in which elevation is expressed as the distance above or below the planet’s mean radius, is also used. Most of the planet consists of gently rolling plains. In some areas the elevations change by only a few hundred metres over distances of hundreds of kilometres. Globally, more than 80 percent of the surface deviates less than 1 km (0.6 mile) from the mean radius. At several locations on the plains are broad, gently sloping topographic depressions, or lowlands, that may reach several thousand kilometres across; they include Atalanta Planitia, Guinevere Planitia, and Lavinia Planitia. (Most features on Venus are named after mythological goddesses, legendary heroines, famous women from history, and names for Venus itself in different languages.)

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Two striking features are the continent-sized highland areas, or terrae—Ishtar Terra in the northern hemisphere and Aphrodite Terra along the equator. Ishtar is roughly the size of Australia, while Aphrodite is comparable in area to South America. Ishtar possesses the most spectacular topography on Venus. Much of its interior is a high plateau, called Lakshmi Planum, that resembles in configuration the Plateau of Tibet on Earth. Lakshmi is bounded by mountains on most sides, the largest range being the enormous Maxwell Montes on the east. These mountains soar about 11 km (7 miles) above the mean radius of Venus. The topography of Aphrodite, more complex than that of Ishtar, is characterized by a number of distinct mountain ranges and several deep, narrow troughs. In addition to the two main terrae are several smaller elevated regions, including Alpha Regio, Beta Regio, and Phoebe Regio.

Many of the surface features on Venus can be attributed to tectonic activity—that is, to deformational motions within the crust. These include mountain belts, plains deformation belts, rifts, coronae, and tesserae, which are discussed in turn below (see also tectonic landform).