Conditions on Venus are often described as "hellish" with daytime temperatures hot enough to melt lead and an atmosphere comprised almost entirely of carbon dioxide
Conditions on Venus are often described as "hellish" with daytime temperatures hot enough to melt lead and an atmosphere comprised almost entirely of carbon dioxide NASA/JPL / Michael Benson

Another mission has its eyes set on Venus as the European Space Agency (ESA) has selected its next Venus orbiter. Called EnVision, it will provide an "all-encompassing" view of the Earth's "evil twin."

The mission was selected on June 10 and is targeted to launch by the early 2030s, the ESA said. The agency will be working together with NASA for EnVision, which aims to provide a "holistic view" of the planet, "from its inner core to upper atmosphere," to determine why the Earth and Venus evolved so differently.

EnVision will have various instruments that will seek to answer some important questions about Venus, like whether it is geologically active, if it once was able to sustain life and if the planet's history can foretell anything about the Earth's fate if it also experiences "catastrophic" greenhouse effect.

As for NASA, it will provide a radar that will map and image the planet's surface. Together, EnVision's instruments will provide an "all-encompassing global view" of the processes on Venus.

"We are thrilled to contribute to ESA's exciting new mission to investigate Venus," Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for science at NASA, said as per the ESA news release. "EnVision leverages strengths in instrument development by both our agencies."

'Triple crown' moment

The ESA made the announcement just about a week after NASA announced its upcoming Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble gases, Chemistry and Imaging (DAVINCI+) and Venus Emissivity, Radio Science, InSAR, Topography and Spectroscopy (VERITAS) missions to Venus.

This makes the upcoming missions a "triple crown" moment for the Venus science community, NASA said in a news release. Together, the three missions will "provide the most comprehensive study of Venus ever."

"I am delighted that the synergistic capabilities of these three new missions will transform our fundamental understanding of Venus," Lori Glaze, director of NASA's Planetary Science Division, said in the NASA news release.

"A new era in the exploration of our closest, yet wildly different, Solar System neighbour awaits us," Günther Hasinger, director of science at the ESA, added. "Together with the newly announced NASA-led Venus missions, we will have an extremely comprehensive science programme at this enigmatic planet well into the next decade."

This photo released by NASA shows the planet Venus in a composite of data from NASA's Magellan spacecraft and Pioneer Venus Orbiter

This photo released by NASA shows the planet Venus in a composite of data from NASA's Magellan spacecraft and Pioneer Venus Orbiter Photo: NASA/JPL-CALTECH / -