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In the April issue of Sky and Telescope, page 30, it mentions that there
is some unknown chemistry in some of Venus' clouds. Particles of something coated with sulfuric acid. To say that there could be life on such would be a really long shot bet, but a sample return mission might be interesting to do. Though building and flying to Venus a return vehicle that could get back out of Venus' atmosphere and gravity well (and some of the Sun's as well) and back to Earth would be rather difficult. It'd be pretty much the same size rocket you'd need to send a small probe from Earth to Mars. And you'd need to ship that to Venus all fueled up... This doesn't look too feasible... Probably more practical to send a small remote control chem lab on a blimp... |
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![]() robert casey wrote: In the April issue of Sky and Telescope, page 30, it mentions that there is some unknown chemistry in some of Venus' clouds. Particles of something coated with sulfuric acid. To say that there could be life on such would be a really long shot bet, but a sample return mission might be interesting to do. Though building and flying to Venus a return vehicle that could get back out of Venus' atmosphere and gravity well (and some of the Sun's as well) and back to Earth would be rather difficult. It'd be pretty much the same size rocket you'd need to send a small probe from Earth to Mars. And you'd need to ship that to Venus all fueled up... This doesn't look too feasible... Probably more practical to send a small remote control chem lab on a blimp... They've been spotting upwellings of material in the Venusian atmosphere recently also. They think they are weather related, but I'd be very surprised if Venus didn't have active volcanoes. Given the sulfur-eating bacteria of the mid-Atlantic ridge, one can certainly picture some sort of microscopic life dwelling in the clouds, also possibly using the sunlight in some form for energy. Pat |
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On Feb 27, 2:39 pm, robert casey wrote:
In the April issue of Sky and Telescope, page 30, it mentions that there is some unknown chemistry in some of Venus' clouds. Particles of something coated with sulfuric acid. To say that there could be life on such would be a really long shot bet, but a sample return mission might be interesting to do. Though building and flying to Venus a return vehicle that could get back out of Venus' atmosphere and gravity well (and some of the Sun's as well) and back to Earth would be rather difficult. It'd be pretty much the same size rocket you'd need to send a small probe from Earth to Mars. And you'd need to ship that to Venus all fueled up... This doesn't look too feasible... Probably more practical to send a small remote control chem lab on a blimp... With ever smaller and robust robotic probes and the supposed expertise of what has otherwise been accomplished of much worse planets and moons, plus the fact that at times Venus is only 100X the distance of our very own physically dark moon, represents that such a sample return of the Venusian atmosphere is in fact affordably and technically doable within existing probe or probe within probe specs. .. - Brad Guth |
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On Feb 27, 5:34 pm, Pat Flannery wrote:
robert casey wrote: In the April issue of Sky and Telescope, page 30, it mentions that there is some unknown chemistry in some of Venus' clouds. Particles of something coated with sulfuric acid. To say that there could be life on such would be a really long shot bet, but a sample return mission might be interesting to do. Though building and flying to Venus a return vehicle that could get back out of Venus' atmosphere and gravity well (and some of the Sun's as well) and back to Earth would be rather difficult. It'd be pretty much the same size rocket you'd need to send a small probe from Earth to Mars. And you'd need to ship that to Venus all fueled up... This doesn't look too feasible... Probably more practical to send a small remote control chem lab on a blimp... They've been spotting upwellings of material in the Venusian atmosphere recently also. They think they are weather related, but I'd be very surprised if Venus didn't have active volcanoes. Given the sulfur-eating bacteria of the mid-Atlantic ridge, one can certainly picture some sort of microscopic life dwelling in the clouds, also possibly using the sunlight in some form for energy. Pat In addition to those likely active lava and mud flows, Venus also has those extremely large domes spewing S8, CO2 plus whatever else is getting geothermally forced out. Venus has been losing roughly 20.5 w/ m2 of its core energy. Would you like to see what an extremely large fluid arch looks like? .. - Brad Guth |
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