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Travel Guide to Venus

Myles Kelleher

Created on November 6, 2025

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Travel Guide to Venus

Earths Sister Planet - The Evening Star

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Summary

Venus is the second farthest planet from the sun, and hottest in our solar system. It shines so bright in our night sky it is sometimes referred to as the "evening star".

Venus's Atmosphere is dense, corrosive, and deadly hot!

Visiting Venus

A trip to our beloved sister planet Venus is highly recommended for any and all wishing for a quick and painful immediate death. There is almost no chance of survival on this barren hellscape of a planet, as the atmosphere is so hot and toxic, nothing, not even most metals can last long.

Venus has a surface hot enough to melt lead!

Ishtar Terra reaches as high as 36,000 feet! thats taller than Mount Everest!

Venus's surface is covered with volcanos, mountains, craters, and cliffs!

Exploring Venus's surface offers many different sights to explore, including Sacagawea, a volcanic crater named after Lewis and Clarks expedition, A deep canyon named Diana, "Tick" volcanos that expel radiating spurs. All of this is yours to explore if you can survive the intense atmospheric pressure and heat that Venus offers.

Destination Overview

Although Venus is a beautiful planet to observe from telescopes, its probably best left that way. Venus has horrible surface conditons that make any human interaction with it physically improbable. Not even unmanned rovers are able to survive more than a couple hours on the surface without breaking down and melting. The surface is unbelievably hot, the air is toxic, and the weight of the dense atmosphere would crush you immediately. So unless you have a death wish, the safest way to observe venus, is safe at home through a telescope, or in orbit. For this you would need a spacecraft capable of sustaining life for 6 months there and 6 months back, advanced trajectory calculations to arrive there when intended.

If you choose to visit Venus, take precaution!