Thursday, February 28, 2008

Climates in the Inner Solar System

I'll post these two links, and then move on.

"Planetary Climate for Dummies" Melissa Strausberg, mentored by Dr. Mark I. Richardson - on CalTech's website

It's not "for dummies," by any means: but this is a pretty good discussion of planetary atmospheres, starting with why Venus, Earth, and Mars have such radically different climates.
"Venus Mysteries Blamed on Colossal Collision"
Space.com (February 28, 2008)

Venus is just like Earth, except that it
  • Is unreasonably dry
  • Is hot enough to melt lead
  • Rotates very, very slowly
    • And spins backward - the only planet to do so
Now John Huw Davies, a British scientist, has an explanation: Two whacking great pieces of rock, small planets in their right, crashed into each other.

Sounds crazy? Maybe, but it explains quite a bit.

bone-dry, hot enough to melt lead and has a chokingly thick atmosphere. It even spins backwards.

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