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Ten Mysteries of Venus

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The surface of Venus is completely inhospitable for life: barren, dry, crushed under an atmosphere about 90 times the pressure of Earth’s and roasted by temperatures two times hotter than an oven. But was it always that way? Could Venus once have been a twin of Earth — a habitable world with liquid water oceans? This is one of the many mysteries associated with our shrouded sister world.

27 years have passed since NASA’s Magellan mission last orbited Venus. That was NASA’s most recent mission to Earth’s sister planet, and while we have gained significant knowledge of Venus since then, there are still numerous mysteries about the planet that remain unsolved. NASA’s DAVINCI (Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble gases, Chemistry, and Imaging) mission hopes to change that.

Video credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

James Tralie (ADNET):
Lead Producer
Lead Editor
Narrator

Brooke Hess (NASA/Interns):
Lead Writer

William Steigerwald (NASA/GSFC):
Writer

James Garvin (NASA, Chief Scientist Goddard):
Scientist

Giada Arney (NASA):
Scientist

Stephanie Getty (NASA/GSFC):
Scientist

Music is "Spring into Life" by Oliver Worth, via Univeral Production Music.

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