There’s not enough water in Venus’s clouds to support life as we know it Alamy Stock Photo
The clouds of Venus, which are mostly made of sulphuric acid, have far less water and far more acid than even the most extreme lifeforms on Earth would be able to survive. This is according to a new analysis of the habitability of the planetâs atmosphere. This finding puts a damper on recent signs of potential life there.
In 2020, a team led by at Cardiff University in the UK found evidence of a compound called phosphine in Venusâs toxic clouds. On Earth, phosphine is a byproduct of life, and the team couldnât come up with another way to produce it on Venus, so suggested that it could hint at life there.
However, a new study by at Queenâs University Belfast, UK, and his colleagues based on a combination of laboratory experiments and observations from probes sent to Venus in the late 1970s and early 80s suggests that life might be impossible in those clouds.
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They based that conclusion on calculations of water activity in the cloudsâ droplets, a measure similar to humidity. Pure liquid water would have a water activity of 1, and perfect dryness would have a score of 0. They found a water activity of less than 0.004 for Venusâs clouds, partly because acid in a droplet lowers its water activity.
This is a concentration of water 100 times below what is needed for the most resilient microorganisms on Earth, said Hallsworth in a press conference. âItâs an unbridgeable distance from what life requires to be active.â
In an area that arid, the membranes that hold cells together would fall apart, he said. âEven the most dry-tolerant microbe on Earth wouldnât stand a chance on Venus.â
Of course, a microbe on Earth has no need to be hardy enough to survive Venus. âLiterally nowhere on Earth has the extreme conditions of the clouds on Venus,â says at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
âThose clouds are more than 100 times more dry than the Atacama desert, which is the driest place on Earth.â
It is possible that life could arise on Venus that is hardier than it is here, or there could be organisms that arenât based on water at all, unlike all life that we know of.
âCertainly any Earth-like life â even our sturdiest extremophiles â would not have an easy time,â says at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. âBut we donât know what the universal laws of biology are.â Unfortunately, we also donât know how to detect non-Earth-like life.
While things arenât looking good for the potential of life floating in the Venusian clouds, there still may be a glimmer of hope. âThe acidity for the Venus cloud droplets is highly uncertain,â says Greaves. âItâs also likely that conditions are not uniform â as on Earth â and so parts of the clouds could be much more favourable than others.â
Three missions are scheduled to launch to Venus in the next decade or so, which may help unravel the mystery of the cloudsâ habitability. If there is life unlike Earth life, those missions wonât be able to spot it, but they will be able to clear up whether there is anywhere in the scorching atmosphere that Earth-like life could stand a chance.
Nature Astronomy
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