For the first time in history, we can see the planet Venus in Color, thanks to NASA Parker Solar Probe! The Wide-field Imager for Parker Solar Probe (WISPR) by the American space agency has managed to take pictures of the surface of Venus revealing stunning continents, plains, plateaus and even a layer of Oxygen. The probe took the image in “wavelengths of the visible spectrum” so, the images are exactly how a human eye would see it. Earlier we only had boring gray pictures of the planet due to the dense atmosphere and toxic clouds that surrounded the planet. However WISPR was able to bypass that.
The Venus photos were taken by the Parker Solar Probe on the dark side of the planet to avoid sunlight which makes the clouds reflective and obstructs any images of the surface. The images highlight distinctive structures that can be differentiated into continents, plains and plateaus. WISPR used infrared sensing to determine which structures were higher and lower based on its heat signature. According to NASA, the higher ones were recorded with bluer shades as they were cooler and the ones in the lower regions were captured in red as they were hotter.
“We’re thrilled with the science insights Parker Solar Probe has provided thus far. Parker continues to outperform our expectations, and we are excited that these novel observations taken during our gravity assist maneuver can help advance Venus research in unexpected ways,” said Nicola Fox, division director for the Heliophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in NASA’s post.
These Venus images are also expected to shed more light on what happened on the planet in the past. It has been theorized that Venus used to be habitable in the past, with strong chemical prints on the
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