Life on Venus

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The atmosphere of Venus as viewed in ultraviolet by the Pioneer Venus Orbiter in 1979.

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The speculation of the existence of life on Venus lowered significantly since the early 1960s, when spacecraft began studying Venus and it became clear that the conditions on Venus are varying.

The fact that Venus is located closer to the Sun than Earth, raising temperatures on the surface to nearly 735 K (462 °C), the atmospheric pressure is 90 times that of Earth, and the extreme hit of the greenhouse effect, make life as we know it unlikely. However, random scientists have speculated that thermoacidophilic extremophile microorganisms might exist in the lower-temperature, acidic upper layers of the Venusian atmosphere.[1][2][3]

Historical views

In 1870, the British astronomer Richard Proctor said the possibility of existence of life on Venus was impossible near its equator,[4] but possible near its poles. The Swedish chemist Svante Arrhenius, who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1903, described Venus in 1918 as a green and wet planet where life would be similar to that of the Carboniferous period on Earth.[citation needed]

Since the late 1950s, increasingly clear evidence from various space probes showed Venus has an extreme climate, with a greenhouse effect generating a constant temperature of about 500 °C on the surface. The atmosphere contains sulfuric acid clouds and the atmospheric pressure at the surface is 90 bar, almost 100 times that of Earth and similar to that of more than 1,000 m (3,300 ft) deep in Earth's oceans. In such environment, and given the increasingly hostile characteristics of the Venusian weather, the chances of life are excluded totally from the surface of Venus. However, there are still some opinions in favor of such a possibility in the atmosphere.[5]

Recent speculation

In the analysis of mission data from the Venera, Pioneer Venus and Magellan missions, it was discovered that carbonyl sulfide, hydrogen sulfide and sulfur dioxide were present together in the upper atmosphere. Venera also detected large amounts of toxic chlorine just below the Venusian cloud cover.[6] Carbonyl sulfide is difficult to produce inorganically,[7] but it can be produced by volcanism.[8] Sulfuric acid is produced in the upper atmosphere by the Sun's photochemical action on carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and water vapour.[citation needed]

Solar radiation constrains the atmospheric habitable zone to between 51 km (65°C) and 62 km (−20°C) altitude, within the acidic clouds.[3] It has been speculated that clouds in the atmosphere of Venus could contain chemicals that can initiate forms of biological activity.[9][10] It has been speculated that any hypothetical microorganisms inhabiting the atmosphere, if present, could employ ultraviolet light (UV) emitted by the Sun as an energy source, which could be an explanation for the dark lines observed in the UV photographs of Venus.[11][12]

See also

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Redfern, Martin (25 May 2004). "Venus clouds 'might harbour life'". BBC News. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. Proctor, Richard A., Other Worlds Than Ours: The Plurality of Worlds Studied Under the Light of Recent Scientific Researches. New York : J.A. Hill and Co., 1870. s. 94.
  5. Venus as a Natural Laboratory for Search of Life in High Temperature Conditions: Events on the Planet on March 1, 1982, L. V. Ksanfomality, published in Astronomicheskii Vestnik, Vol. 46, No. 1, 2012.
  6. Venus Revealed: A New Look Below the Clouds of Our Mysterious Twin Planet, David Grinspoon, ISBN 978-0-201-32839-4
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