The possibility of life on Venus surface
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The possibility of life on Venus surface
There's a theory which says that some bacteria may be on Venus atmosphere, upper clouds, where temperatures are similar to Earth.
But I think that maybe life is possible on the surface. Obviously it won't be anything like Earth, because such organisms would live at 90atm pressure, use liquid sulfur as solvent or merely for transportation of substances and they won't be made of the same carbon-based substances we are made, like carbohydrates and proteins. They would be based on liquid sulfur ( S8 for example ) and polymers with silicon, oxygen, carbon, aluminium, sulfur, chlorine, fluorine and other substances. Maybe they would be based on substances similar to zeolites.
Such substances would be much more stable at higher temperatures than proteins or DNA, for example.
According to Venus radar maps, the surface is dry, but maybe there are small or even big sulfur lakes in which radar didn't spot. Radar is simply not enough to tell us all aspects of the surface. To me there are still many things to be discovered in such misterious surface.
So Venusians would be heavier, since their substances would have higher molecular mass than ours, would be hot and living under high pressures. High pressure is not a problem, since there are organisms living on sea floor in hydrothermal vents at similar pressures.
What do you think about my idea? Let's discuss.
But I think that maybe life is possible on the surface. Obviously it won't be anything like Earth, because such organisms would live at 90atm pressure, use liquid sulfur as solvent or merely for transportation of substances and they won't be made of the same carbon-based substances we are made, like carbohydrates and proteins. They would be based on liquid sulfur ( S8 for example ) and polymers with silicon, oxygen, carbon, aluminium, sulfur, chlorine, fluorine and other substances. Maybe they would be based on substances similar to zeolites.
Such substances would be much more stable at higher temperatures than proteins or DNA, for example.
According to Venus radar maps, the surface is dry, but maybe there are small or even big sulfur lakes in which radar didn't spot. Radar is simply not enough to tell us all aspects of the surface. To me there are still many things to be discovered in such misterious surface.
So Venusians would be heavier, since their substances would have higher molecular mass than ours, would be hot and living under high pressures. High pressure is not a problem, since there are organisms living on sea floor in hydrothermal vents at similar pressures.
What do you think about my idea? Let's discuss.
Diakonov- Meteor

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Registration date: 2008-10-02
Re: The possibility of life on Venus surface
I'm not really convinced that sulfur lakes may exist on Venus. Cassini was able to relatively easily spot lakes on Titan through the use of its radar, which, if I'm not mistaken, is quite similar in technique to what was done with Magellan on Venus. Lakes generally appear to be dark in radar due to scattering of the signal within the liquid, and little of it returning to the spacecraft.

Hyperextremophiles on Venus is certainly an idea that can be entertained, especially in the absence of much data on the surface.

Hyperextremophiles on Venus is certainly an idea that can be entertained, especially in the absence of much data on the surface.
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Sirius_Alpha- Admin

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Re: The possibility of life on Venus surface
Venus has enough air pressure to allow sulfur and sulfuric acid to be liquid at high ranges of temperatures. And Venus is so rich in sulfur... Maybe such liquid sulfur is not in open air, but in shallow or deep caves underground, I don't know. And if there's liquid sulfur in open air, maybe they're small. I don't think that the Venus maps have enough resolution to finish conclusions. Maybe shallow liquid sulfur lakes or even rivers can respond different in radar than ethane or water, because it's a different and much denser substance, because of its high atomic weight. There's more to explore on Venus!
Or maybe the pressure is so high that turn sulfur or carbon dioxyde into supercritical liquids.
Or maybe the pressure is so high that turn sulfur or carbon dioxyde into supercritical liquids.
Diakonov- Meteor

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Registration date: 2008-10-02
Re: The possibility of life on Venus surface
Here's a typical view of the Venusian surface from the Magellan left-looking radar. The resolution is 75 metres per pixel


How small are the lakes you have in mind? If they're anything bigger than ~1 km, they would probably have been noticed by now.
I'm not quite sure what sulfur lakes look like in radar. Maybe someone here knows more about that and would be willing to share some insight?


How small are the lakes you have in mind? If they're anything bigger than ~1 km, they would probably have been noticed by now.
I'm not quite sure what sulfur lakes look like in radar. Maybe someone here knows more about that and would be willing to share some insight?
Last edited by Sirius_Alpha on Sun Oct 12, 2008 8:22 pm; edited 1 time in total (Reason for editing : Picture went away.)
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Sirius_Alpha- Admin

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Re: The possibility of life on Venus surface
I didn't knew the resolutions were so high. I thought they were smaller. But, as I said, it might be possible to still have liquid sulfur inside caves or maybe in underground seas, but that's only what I think.
Diakonov- Meteor

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Re: The possibility of life on Venus surface
Has anyone got a phase diagram for sulfur and/or sulfuric acid that covers the temperature/pressure range appropriate for the Venusian surface? I've only been able to find sketch diagrams for sulfur which aren't much use here.
Lazarus- Jovian

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Re: The possibility of life on Venus surface
Oh no! The Venusians are in collaboration with the Martians? We're doomed!! 
Seriously, I think that surface life on Venus is plausible. They would be very different from Earth life, but still plausible.

NuclearVacuum- Planetesimal

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Re: The possibility of life on Venus surface
I wonder about that.
I see one huge problem here, the upturning of it's surface to explain the lack of craters theory. If it is right I don't see life surviving for a very long time in any cave ((assuming there even there))on the surface.
It's still possible however and it'd be an interesting idea to pursue.
I see one huge problem here, the upturning of it's surface to explain the lack of craters theory. If it is right I don't see life surviving for a very long time in any cave ((assuming there even there))on the surface.
It's still possible however and it'd be an interesting idea to pursue.
Darkness nova- Asteroid

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Re: The possibility of life on Venus surface
I once read that life might exist in Venus' atmospheric clouds, where the temperature is lower, and where water vapour exists in limited quantities.
Ah yeah... I looked around and couldn't find one either.
Lazarus wrote:Has anyone got a phase diagram for sulfur and/or sulfuric acid that covers the temperature/pressure range appropriate for the Venusian surface? I've only been able to find sketch diagrams for sulfur which aren't much use here.
Ah yeah... I looked around and couldn't find one either.
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Sirius_Alpha- Admin

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Re: The possibility of life on Venus surface
Sulfur's vapour pressure at Venus's surface temperature of 735 K is just 1.3 atm, so it'd be 1.4% of the atmosphere at 100% humidity, which doesn't sound unreasonable. It might rise and condense as solid S8 in the higher atmosphere and be the mysterious UV absorbing stuff that still puzzles scientists.
qraal- Hydrogen Atom

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