Scientists Finally Identify What Drives Venus’s Fast Winds

Scientists find that Venus’s fast, superrotating winds are driven primarily by a daily thermal tide from solar heating.

Advertisement
Written by Gadgets 360 Staff | Updated: 29 November 2025 12:28 IST
Highlights
  • Daily thermal tide found to power Venus’s fast winds
  • Solar heating drives momentum to cloud-top superwinds
  • Study overturns decades of superrotation theories

Venus is known to have extreme weather on its surface

Photo Credit: NASA

Venus is notorious for extreme weather. Its dense atmosphere carries clouds around the planet at speeds above 100 metres per second — about 60 times faster than the planet's slow rotation. In fact, the atmosphere circles Venus in just four Earth days, even though the planet itself spins once every 243 days. For years, the origin of this super-rotating atmosphere remained unclear. Now researchers say they have identified a key driving force behind these runaway winds.

Daily thermal tide identified as key wind driver

According to the new study, most momentum driving Venus's fast cloud-top winds comes from a once-per-day (diurnal) thermal tide powered by solar heating. The researchers analysed two decades of data from ESA's Venus Express and JAXA's Akatsuki orbiters, which tracked atmospheric conditions via radio signals, and ran numerical simulations of Venus's circulation.

They found that "diurnal tides play a primary role in transporting momentum toward the tops of Venus's thick clouds," overturning earlier ideas that twice-daily tides dominated. The work includes the first analysis of Venus's Southern Hemisphere, strengthening the case that daily solar heating drives the atmosphere's extraordinary superrotation.

Advertisement

Long-standing mystery

For decades, Venus's violent winds have puzzled scientists. Early spacecraft data in the 1960s showed the atmosphere racing around the planet in just days, giving rise to the term “superrotation,” but its cause remained elusive. As one review observes, "Although Venus's atmospheric superrotation was discovered in the 1960s, the cause is still debated".

Advertisement

Numerous theories — from gravity waves to circulation cells — were proposed, but none fully solved the mystery. The new study builds on a long history of research into Venus's atmospheric quirks.

 

Catch the latest from the Consumer Electronics Show on Gadgets 360, at our CES 2026 hub.

Further reading: Venus, Planets, Science, Space
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Flipkart Sale Early Deals: iPhone 17 Price in India Drops Under Rs. 75,000
  2. Honor Magic 8 Pro Air Unboxing Video Reveals Key Specifications
  3. This Realme P Series Phone Could Launch in India With a 10,000mAh Battery
  4. Samsung Galaxy A07 5G Launched With 6,000mAh Battery: Price, Features
  5. iQOO Z11 Turbo Selfie Camera Revealed in New Teasers
  6. Here's When the Vivo V70 Series Could Launch in India
  7. Here Are Some of the Best Smartphones Available in India With AMOLED Displays
  1. Vivo V70 Series India Launch Timeline Leaked; Two Models Expected to Debut
  2. iPhone 17 Price in India Drops Under Rs. 75,000 Ahead of Flipkart Republic Day Sale 2026
  3. Slack Introduces Agentic AI: How the New Slackbot Automates Your Workflow
  4. Arc Raiders' Sales Cross 12.4 Million Copies as Embark Studios Rolls Out New Update
  5. Qubo Dashcam 4G Live Launched in India With Live GPS Tracking, Safety Alerts Alongside Dashcam Trio: Price, Features
  6. Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 8 to Reportedly Miss Out on Major Camera Upgrades; Specifications Leak
  7. Apple's iOS 26.3 Beta 2 Update Hints at End-to-End Encryption Support for RCS Messaging: Report
  8. Realme P Series Phone With 10,000mAh Battery Spotted on BIS Website; Could Launch in India Soon
  9. OpenAI Acquires HealthTech Startup Torch, Plans to Integrate It With ChatGPT Health
  10. Oppo A6c China Launch Date Announced; Company Reveals Design, Colour Options
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.