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- There has been very little analysis of Venusian surface material, so it is possible that evidence of past life, if it ever existed, could be found with a probe capable of enduring Venus's current extreme surface conditions. However, the resurfacing of the planet in the past 500 million years means that it is unlikely that ancient surface rocks remain, especially those containing the mineral tremolite which, theoretically, could have encased some biosignatures.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_on_Venus
Mar 28, 2024 · Some of the building blocks of life are surprisingly stable in Venus-like conditions, according to a new lab experiment.
Nov 18, 2020 · Signs of the gas phosphine in Venus’s atmosphere have faded—but they’re still there, according to a new data analysis. In September, an international team of astronomers made headlines when...
The possibility of life on Venus is a subject of interest in astrobiology due to Venus' proximity and similarities to Earth. To date, no definitive evidence has been found of past or present life there.
Feb 11, 2024 · News outlets boasted headlines about the possibility of life on Venus, gently noting the possibility of unknown chemistry. But then in July 2021 came a shock. In the same journal, a different group of researchers responded with their own paper, brutally blunt in its title: “No evidence of phosphine in the atmosphere of Venus from independent ...
Oct 26, 2023 · Cosmologist Paul Sutter explains how Venus is still a candidate for life, despite 900 degree temperatures, crushing pressures, and poisonous air.
igns of a potential marker of life in Venus’s atmosphere have faded — but they’re still there, according to a new data analysis. In September, an international
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Nov 27, 2020 · After reanalyzing data from Venus, researchers say they see much less phosphine, a possible sign of life. The announcement in September took the world by storm: In radio emissions from Venus's atmosphere, researchers found signs of phosphine, a toxic compound that on Earth is made in significant amounts only by microbes and chemists.