Venus has the thickest atmosphere among the planets in our solar system. Its atmosphere is composed mainly of carbon dioxide and thick clouds of sulfuric acid, creating intense pressure and trapping heat to create a runaway greenhouse effect.
Mercury is the only inner planet with no significant atmosphere. Its thin exosphere consists mainly of oxygen, sodium, hydrogen, helium, and potassium.
Earth is an inner planet in our solar system. Inner planets, also known as terrestrial planets, are those that are closer to the sun and are composed mainly of rock and metal.
Venus is considered the most gaseous inner planet due to its thick atmosphere composed mainly of carbon dioxide, with trace amounts of nitrogen and other gases.
Venus has a thick carbon dioxide atmosphere, making up about 96.5% of its atmosphere. This high concentration of carbon dioxide contributes to the intense greenhouse effect on the planet, resulting in surface temperatures hot enough to melt lead.
Jupiter.
Jupiter, with an atmosphere of 14,000 miles to the core.
Venus has the thickest atmosphere among the planets in our solar system. Its atmosphere is composed mainly of carbon dioxide and thick clouds of sulfuric acid, creating intense pressure and trapping heat to create a runaway greenhouse effect.
Mercury, the known planet that orbits closest to the sun, has no atmosphere.
Venus.
Venus
murcury
Mercury is the only inner planet with no significant atmosphere. Its thin exosphere consists mainly of oxygen, sodium, hydrogen, helium, and potassium.
Mars
EARTH!!!!!!!!
Earth is an inner planet in our solar system. Inner planets, also known as terrestrial planets, are those that are closer to the sun and are composed mainly of rock and metal.
Venus is considered the most gaseous inner planet due to its thick atmosphere composed mainly of carbon dioxide, with trace amounts of nitrogen and other gases.