A Day on Venus is Longer Than a Year on Venus

On Venus, you’d celebrate your birthday before the sun sets. This planet rotates so slowly that its day (one full rotation) is longer than its year (one orbit around the Sun). Welcome to the weirdest planet in our solar system.

πŸͺ The Numbers

Venus rotation (1 day): 243 Earth days
Venus orbit (1 year): 225 Earth days
Day > Year!

Also: Venus rotates backwards (retrograde rotation)β€”the Sun rises in the west!

πŸ”¬ Why This Happens

Slow rotation theories:
1. Giant impact: Collision slowed rotation
2. Atmospheric drag: Thick atmosphere creates friction
3. Tidal locking attempt: Sun’s gravity trying to lock Venus

Retrograde rotation: Likely from a massive impact that flipped the planet

🌑️ Other Venus Weirdness

Extreme conditions:

  • Surface temperature: 465Β°C (869Β°F) – hot enough to melt lead
  • Atmospheric pressure: 92x Earth (like being 900m underwater)
  • Clouds: Sulfuric acid
  • Greenhouse effect: Runaway heating trapped heat

Hottest planet: Even hotter than Mercury (closer to Sun)!

🎯 A Day in the Life on Venus

If you could survive:

  • Sunrise in the west
  • 117 Earth days of daylight
  • 117 Earth days of night
  • One year passes in 225 Earth days
  • You’d experience 1.9 sunrises per Venusian year!

🌟 Fun Venus Facts

  • Brightest object in night sky (after Moon)
  • No moons
  • Soviet Venera probes survived 23-127 minutes on surface
  • Volcanoes: Possibly still active
  • Named after: Roman goddess of love (ironic for hellish planet!)

Venus: where time itself is broken!

πŸ‘€ About the Analyst

Shrikant Bhosale is a theoretical researcher exploring the intersections of information theory, geometry, and physical systems. This audit is part of the Val Buzz project, an automated pipeline for validating scientific architecture via Scope Theory and the Information Scaling Law (ISL).

© 2026 Shrikant Bhosale. Evaluation powered by the VAL BUZZ V2 Rigorous Engine.
Independent Audit | Non-Affiliated with Original Authors