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      • “Our research shows that the sulphuric acid clouds in Venus have too little water for active life to exist, based on what we know of life on Earth. We have also found that the conditions of water and temperature within Jupiter’s clouds could allow microbial-type life to subsist, assuming that other requirements such as nutrients are present.
      www.universetoday.com/151672/bad-news-life-probably-cant-exist-on-venus-good-news-it-could-be-in-jupiters-clouds/
  1. Sep 14, 2020 · According to the researchers, the known abiotic processes are unlikely to have produced the abundances of phosphine - around 20 parts per billion (ppb) - found in the Venusian cloud decks.

  2. Sep 14, 2020 · Is there microbial life in the atmosphere of Earth's closest neighbor, Venus? An international team of astronomers has found tentative but highly compelling evidence.

  3. Jupiter’s clouds have water conditions that would allow Earth-like life to exist, but this isnt possible in Venus’ clouds, according to groundbreaking new research led by a Queen’s University Belfast scientist.

  4. Sep 14, 2020 · Viewing Venus as a relatively unlikely candidate for hosting life, astronomers have long searched for evidence of life elsewhere, such as on Mars and Jupiter’s icy moons, the Times notes....

    • Nora Mcgreevy
  5. Jul 3, 2021 · These findings, according to a team of independent researchers, was a possible sign that microbial life might exist in Venussulfuric acid clouds (aka. a potential biosignature)....

  6. It's not possible for life to exist in the clouds of Venus. It's simply too dry, says an international research team led from Queen's University Belfast, UK. Hopes had been...

  7. Jun 28, 2021 · Story at a glance. A study of sulphuric acid clouds on Venus found there wasn’t enough water for active life to exist on the planet. The calculations, replicated for Earth and Mars, suggest that...

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