At similar atmospheric pressure, the difference in temperature is about 60K;
What I consider relevant is atmospheric mass, not weight or pressure.
Venus gravity is only 0.904 G. So we must choose for Venus a height where pressure is 0.904 times lower than on Earth, in order to get the same atmospheric mass per square meter as on Earth. If we take further into account that average ground level on Earth is around 250 m above sea level (
see) with a pressure reduced by around 0.97 with respect to sea level, then the concerning height on Venus (
table) is 53.6 km (instead of 55 km) and temperature is 62°C (instead of 75°C).
This would mean that at similar atmospheric mass per surface, the difference in temperature is only 47°K (288°K on Earth, 335°K on Venus, where 335°K < 1.18*288°K).
if you account for albedo, cloud effects and other effects, you possibly will be left with effect due to greenhouse gases alone. That remaining effect is most likely not zero.
The high albedo on Venus is due to its clouds. From the fact that Earth satellites cannot look through clouds in the infrared (e.g.
temperature measurements of the oceans), we can conclude that clouds on Earth are not only a barrier for incoming but also for outgoing (thermal) radiation. Is there any evidence that the opaque sulfuric acid clouds on Venus affect outgoing thermal radiation significantly less than incoming radiation from the sun?
This get's back to Ziggurat's point: a primary reason Venus' atmospheric temperature at the planet surface is so high is because of the higher atmospheric pressure.
Ultimately, me too, I consider
lapse rate rather an effect of surface temperature than a cause of it. Otherwise, (as far as I can see) I would have to retract this statement of post #1:
And if it were possible to cool down the whole planet Venus to zero degree Celsius, its temperature would remain near water freezing point over millions of years.
Cheers, Wolfgang
The next glacial seemed rapidly approaching, when paleoclimatologists met in 1972 to discuss this issue (a period of so-called global cooling). The previous interglacial periods seemed to have lasted about 10,000 years each. Assuming that the present interglacial period would be just as long, they concluded, "it is likely that the present-day warm epoch will terminate relatively soon if man does not intervene." (Quaternary glaciation)