The temperature doesn't actually vary much, day or night. The temperatures
are around 460 to 480 degrees Celsius everywhere, all the time.
Venus's surface temperature is the same on both the day and night side.
All eight planets have a surface temperature, though it varies as the planets distance from the sun varies. Closer planets to the sun generally have a higher surface temperature, while further planets have a colder surface temperature.
There are no cold locations on Venus. The entire planet, including the poles and even the night side, are practically the same temperature, thanks to the rapid movement of heat by the thick atmosphere. The surface is about 460°C (860° F), hot enough to melt lead. However, as with other planets, the upper atmosphere of Venus is colder, a frigid -112°C about 100 kilometers from the surface (30 kilometers above the cloud tops). It can be as low as -173°C high above the night side of the planet.
Venus a more or less constant temperature of 450 degrees Celsius all year round day and night thanks to its thick cloud cover. In addition its axial tilt is very small so that seasons are barely apparent.
You can but it has to be clear sky not cloudy, it has to be dark. Venus is called the evening star and the morning star because that's when you can see it, early in the morning when the sun is not out or late at night!
Yes, Venus has one cold side and one hot side and if you land on Venus you would probably freeze or melt.2nd Answer:That is true for the planet Mercury, but Venus is covered with thick clouds which hold in the heat. The temperature is always about 860 degrees, F.
There is no atmosphere so it is surface temperature only. The surface temperature in full sun can be as high as about 200ºF to as low (on the dark side) as about -200ºF.
10 K
Mercury doesn't have a atmosphere, so one side is always cold and the other is extremely hot. Venus is hotter because it has an atmosphere, and it traps in the heat from the sun, also the gases on Venus acts like a greenhouse effect making it hotter.
Planet with an atmosphere, Venus. Planet without an atmosphere, Mercury (on the day side).
The surface temperature on the planet Venus is almost uniform planet-wide, even at the poles and even at night. This is about 464°C (867°F). The heat is carried by convection through its thick atmosphere, which blocks 60% of the sunlight but also prevents the surface from cooling by infrared radiation.Both night side and day side of Venus are very hot about 460°C or 860°F.
yes, when one side of glass painted by mercury, it becomes a mirror!