If venus still had an internally generated magnetic field and it was as strong as earth's...

if venus still had an internally generated magnetic field and it was as strong as earth's, would the planet resemble earth today?

It would depend on how strong the magnetic field was and what you consider "resemble" to mean. Technically, it "resembles" earth more than any of those other planets or moons in your image: it has atmosphere and liquid on the surface.

Venus doesn't have any liquid on its surface you fucking retard, it's over 400 degrees celsius.

No, it is too close to the Sun, with or without a magnetic field it would eventually have heated up enough that any liquid water would be vaporized and a runaway greenhouse effect would start up. Magnetic fields are only good for slowing down atmospheric erosion.

I think you're wrong.
If earth was moved into venus orbit global temp would rise only by about 30F, which is catastrophic yes, but it wouldn't evaporate the oceans.

nothing you said is correct.
titan is the only other object in this system that has stable bodies of surface liquid

>if there was some pseudoscience forcefield around a planet made of sulfuric acid with intense volcanic activity would humans be able to live there?
t. brainlet

The real problem wasn't the lack of a magnetic field but the lack of tectonic activity, which is crucial on Earth to avoid building up CO2 in the atmosphere.
You also have to consider that initially the sun was colder than what it is today, according to some models (yet unverified) it's possible that venus remained habitable for as much as 2 billion years before giving up to the runaway greenhouse effect.

No.
>Different material composition.
>Too close to the sun (at least closer than Earth is).

I imagine it could look somewhat like Mars without the ice caps with pools of green and yellow acids that streak across the surface following valleys made by the winds and with a beautiful atmosphere.
I almost want to see what the Venus I just described would look like. Probs hella far off, but I think I'm in love with the imaginary concept.

so far nobody has given any useful information. it's all just personal opinions based on that one discovery channel documentary about the planets
you watched 15 years ago.

Nobody has mentioned the fact venus rotates super slow and is the main reason why it lost its magnetic field.
If you want convection, the planet has to be spinning fast enough to start with.