Venus Unclouded: Scientists Release Unique Photos of Earth's Sister Planet

© AP Photo / MTI, Peter KomkaThe larger black dot, top right, is the planet Venus as it transits across the face of the Sun as viewed from Earth in Budapest, Hungary
The larger black dot, top right, is the planet Venus as it transits across the face of the Sun as viewed from Earth in Budapest, Hungary - Sputnik International
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Astronomers released high-resolution images of the Venus' surface that cannot be observed in visible light since it is always hidden beneath a thick layer of acid clouds.

Researchers used the world's largest fully steerable radio telescope, known as the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT), as well as a powerful radar transmitter at the Arecibo Observatory, located in Puerto Rico, to make detailed pictures of the planet's surface, featuring mountains, ridges and volcanoes.

NASA scientists are trying to visualize what a mission to Earth's closest planetary neighbor looks like. This is a rendition of a cockpit for a giant airship that will lurk high above the clouds, where the temperature is 175 degrees -- cool enough for astronauts to be able to work outside the airships wearing special suits - Sputnik International
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The latest series of images was taken in 2012. Detailed radar pictures of the Venetian surface were first obtained at the Arecibo Observatory back in 1988.

Astronomers used both sets of photos to study how the planet's surface changed over time. They look for the signs of dynamic geological processes in the hope of broadening our understanding of Venus' geological history and its current state.

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