"Dinosaurs" on Venus? Could be...

by Nathan Natas 3 Replies latest jw friends

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    Thursday, 26 September, 2002, 00:29 GMT 01:29 UK
    Venus may have bugs, say scientists


    An image of Venus captured by the Galileo spacecraft

    Scientists in the United States say clouds high in the atmosphere of the planet Venus contain chemicals that may suggest the presence of life.

    Venus: The facts
    Second planet from the Sun
    Similar in size and mass to Earth
    Thick, poisonous atmosphere of carbon dioxide and sulphuric acid
    Greenhouse effect keeps the surface hot enough for molten metal to flow
    Space probes have never found any sign of life on Venus, which has an extremely hot surface and an atmosphere that contains a mixture of poisonous chemicals.

    But Dirk Schulze-Makuch and Louis Irwin, from the University of Texas, say the Venusian atmosphere is "relatively hospitable" and may be home to large numbers of bacteria.

    "From an astrobiology point of view, Venus is not hopeless," the scientists claim after finishing their research, reported in the New Scientist magazine.

    However, most astronomers remain sceptical and the general consensus is that life on the Earth's closest neighbour would be impossible.

    Oddities

    Using data from the Russian Venera space missions and also the US Pioneer Venus and Magellan probes, the researchers have been studying the high concentration of water droplets in the Venusian clouds.
    Nasa's Magellan mission ended in 1994

    They noticed oddities in its chemical composition that they say could be explained by the presence of microbes.

    The scientists found hydrogen sulphide and sulphur dioxide - two gases which react with each other, and are not seen in the same place unless something is producing them.

    They also say that - despite solar radiation and lightning - the atmosphere contains hardly any carbon monoxide, suggesting that something is removing the gas.

    Bacterial life

    The researchers told the New Scientist that "bugs living in the Venusian clouds could be combining sulphur dioxide with carbon monoxide and possibly hydrogen sulphide or carbonyl sulphide in a metabolism similar to that of some early Earth bugs".

    They also believe the temperatures of Venus was once much cooler and there could have been oceans on the planet.

    "Life could have started there and retreated to stable niches once the runaway greenhouse effect began," Mr Schulze-Makuch says.

    But most scientists are sceptical.

    They say that tiny droplets of water are not enough to support life.

  • cruzanheart
    cruzanheart

    Don't tell my 6-year-old or he'll start building a space shuttle in the back yard to get up there! He is pondering the heavy question of why Jehovah bothered to make dinosaurs only to have them becomed extinct.

    Nina

  • Sentinel
    Sentinel

    Hi Nathan,

    Although this type of information is something I am familiar with, I'm glad you posted it here for everyone.

    There are many possibilities and many questions. Our scientists work hard to give us answers, but in many instances, can only present us with "maybe's" and "what if's". And within the scientific groups, there is so much differential going on. Are we just to "pick" what sounds good to us? And, could our own ideas have just as much merit?

    Could be.

    I do hope that someday before I die, the creators will return and enlighten us. I so much want to be here to be a part of all of it.

    Sentinel

  • funkyderek
    funkyderek
    There are many possibilities and many questions. Our scientists work hard to give us answers, but in many instances, can only present us with "maybe's" and "what if's". And within the scientific groups, there is so much differential going on. Are we just to "pick" what sounds good to us? And, could our own ideas have just as much merit?

    No, Sentinel. The wonderful thing about science is that we don't just "pick what sounds good to us." Science is based on testable hypotheses. If they don't fit the evidence, they're out. Our own ideas could have just as much merit, but to be accepted they would have to withstand the rigours of the scientific process.

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