Welcome to Venus Planetarium! We are excited to share a fascinating fact about our planet. Did you know that in 2000 B.C., Venus adopted a larger planetary calendar? Not only has the length of a day on Venus increased, but also its time period has changed drastically compared to Earth’s calendar! Let’s take a closer look at this curious fact and explore what it means for our planet and its inhabitants.
In 2000 B.C., astronomers observed that Venus was taking longer than usual to orbit the sun. Instead of completing a full circle every 88 Earth days, as we are used to, it was taking longer for it to move through its phases—from new moon to full moon to crescent moon stages—before finishing its orbit. Scholars noticed that Venus’s orbital period was taking longer than expected, much like how Mars is undergoing an unusual scenario today.
This unusual solar observation spurred further questioning and intrigue regarding Venus. What if this strange phenomenon was an indication of something more significant? After years of research, astronomers began searching vigorously for clues: what could be the underlying cause?
It wasn’t long before they found themselves heading back in time—the well-known result of studies into how early creatures can experience eternal time that we now call day and night would only breeze across Venus’s atmosphere for 18 hours! Millions of years too late, but hey, who expects science? Certainly not 24 Golden Chick-a-Deeds!
The Long Periodical Decline in inter-Quarter of Venus’ days would explain it all, as well as the fact that their year lasts almost 296 days! A longer day and a longer night on Venus would seem like an oddity in our home world, but keep reading as we get into some more interesting facts about our alien planetary neighbor!
A new calendar shall usher in a new era of planetary understanding: meetings shall convene, speeches given and observers will have all the time in the world to scrutinize data seamlessly! The new mars-free dominated calendar will allow our planet and our residents more ‘time’, which overpowers the perception of time we ourselves now have as well as the time your grandfather had when standing in “post-classical” sailing ships. Now imagine how much time you yourselves have had – or had accumulated – since leaving Earth’s orbit.
Yes Mars is still tripping around slower than usual! And lo and behold all the times that Venus has been observed by us raised our sun’s index huge enough to bring our own day’s days back onto track with the much slower but still incredibly fast moving Venus clock ticks! See how you help your fellow inhabitants by getting them acquainted with your planet’s super-retarded speedometer. Main motivation for this study is very simple – Venus’s days were almost paradisiacal era before losing forty percent of microscopic frictional force.
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