9 to the 12th power would be 9 * 9 * 9 * 9 * 9 * 9 * 9 * 9 * 9 which would equal 282 429 536 481
= 90 (9*10)
Eight 9s do not equal 100. 9 + 9 + 9 + 9 + 9 + 9 + 9 + 9 = 72
81
9+9 and 9+9+9+9+9
Venera 8: Vasilisa region (10.70°S 335.25°E) Venera 9: Beta Regio (31.01°N 291.64°E) Venera 10: Near Venera 9 (15.42°N 291.51°E)
Just because they can....
The following spacecraft sucessfully flew to Venus (some did not accomplish their mission goals, or were only fly-bys, but did reach the vicinity of the planet): Sputnik 7 - Venera 1 - Mariner 1 - Sputnik 19 - Mariner 2 - Sputnik 20 - Sputnik 21 - Venera 1964A - Venera 1964B - Cosmos 27 - Zond 1 - Venera 2 - Venera 3, Venera 4 - Mariner 5 - Cosmos 167 - Venera 5 - Venera 6 - Venera 7 - Cosmos 359 - Venera 8 - Cosmos 482 - Mariner 10 - Venera 9 - Venera 10 - Pioneer Venus 1 - Pioneer Venus 2 - Venera 11 - Venera 12 - Venera 13 - Venera 14 - Venera 15 - Venera 16 - Vega 1 - Vega 2 - Galileo - Magellan -Cassini - Venus Express - MESSENGER - Planet-C (Venus Climate Orbiter) (See the related link below)
The robots that have explored Venus include the Soviet Venera program missions, such as Venera 7, Venera 9, and Venera 13. The most recent mission to Venus was the Akatsuki probe launched by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency in 2010.
The only robots to have landed on Venus were the Soviet Union's Venera series, which included spacecraft like Venera 7, Venera 9, and Venera 13. These missions provided valuable data about Venus' atmosphere and surface before succumbing to the planet's harsh conditions.
Mariner 2 (NASA fly-by) Venera 2 (USSR fly-by) Venera 3 (USSR landing, destroyed in atmosphere upon landing) Venera 4 (USSR probe landing) Mariner 5 (Nasa fly-by) Venera 6 (USSR probe landing) Venera 7 (USSR probe landing) Venera 8 (USSR landing) Mariner 10 (Nasa fly-by on way to Mercury) Venera 9 (USSR orbiter and landing) Venera 10 (USSR orbiter and landing) Pioneer Venus 1 (NASA orbiter) Pioneer Venus 2 (4 separate NASA probes) Venera 12 (USSR lander and orbiter) Venera 11 (USSR lander and orbiter) Venera 13 (USSR lander and orbiter) Venera 14 (USSR lander and orbiter) Venera 15 (USSR orbiter) Vega 1 (USSR probe and Comet Halley flyby) Vega 2 (USSR probe and Comet Halley flyby ) Galileo (NASA fly-by on way to Jupiter)
Santa Venera's population is 6,800.
Venera Getova was born in 1980.
Saint Venera died in 143.
Venera 8 landed in the Vasilisa Region of Venus.
9 Venera probes were sent to Venus by the Russians but there is no space station
The area of Santa Venera is 900,000.0 square meters.