No Venus suffers from extreme green house effect. 1. Because its so close to the sun and 2. because the gases prevent the heat from leaving the atmosphere. The asteroid that supposedly
hit Venus effected the rotation on its axis, which is why it rotates the opposite of Earth and many other planets.
2007-04-12 05:27:31
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answer #1
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answered by Shifter 3
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No. That would actually make Venus more Earthlike. A lot of the heat on Venus is a result of greenhouse effect from a carbon dioxide atmosphere ten times heavier than Earth's. An asteroid impact would thin the atmosphere and kick up dust, cooling the planet.
2007-04-12 12:01:52
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answer #2
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answered by novangelis 7
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No. The planet's high temperature is explained by the strong green house effects of dominant gas in Venus which is CO2. It is also closer to the sun than our earth and that makes a great difference in the global temperature of the planet.
2007-04-12 12:05:30
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answer #3
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answered by Scientist13905 3
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No.
Venus being almost twice as close to the Sun as the Earth is would explain it, though. It gets *hot* when you get closer to the Sun.
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2007-04-12 12:02:35
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answer #4
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answered by tlbs101 7
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