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On January 9, 1643, the Italian astronomer Giovanni Riccioli saw a weird glowing light on the night side of Venus.

He named it "The Ashen Light of Venus." Astronomers have seen it intermittently since then, while others who have looked for it have not been able to find it. To this day, no one really know what causes the Ashen Light. At first, people wanted to attribute it to the optical quality of telescopes. Today many believe that the light is associated with lightning storms on Venus. It could also be the result of solar radiation interacting with the atmosphere similar to how auroras happen on Earth. Whatever it is, it's been a scientific mystery for centuries.
Transcript
00:00On this day in space.
00:04On January 9th, 1643, the Italian astronomer Giovanni Ricchioli saw a weird glowing light
00:10on the night side of Venus.
00:11He named it the Ashen Light of Venus.
00:14Astronomers have seen it intermittently since then, while others who have looked for it
00:17have not been able to find it.
00:19To this day, no one really knows what causes the ashen light.
00:23At first, people wanted to attribute it to the optical quality of telescopes.
00:27Today many believe that the light is associated with lightning storms on Venus.
00:30It could also be the result of solar radiation interacting with the atmosphere, similar to
00:34how auroras happen on Earth.
00:37Whatever it is, it's been a scientific mystery for centuries.
00:40And that's what happened on this day in space.
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