PHOTOS:NASA,LORISANDERS/HARVARD; ILLUSTRATION:RAJALOCKEY
DISCOVERIES
With a temperature hot enough to melt lead and a
suffocating,toxicatmosphere90timesthickerthan
Earth’s,thesurfaceofVenusresemblestheclassical
idea of Hell. But this was not always the case.
AteamatNASA’sGoddardInstituteforSpace
Studies (GISS) has found Venus may have had an
oceanofliquidwaterandasurfacewithhabitable
temperatures for two billion years of its history.
“Many of the same tools we use to model climate
change on Earth can be adapted to study climates on
other planets, both past and present,” said researcher
Michael Way.
The GISS team plugged information about Venus’s
early oceans, taken by the Pioneer mission, into their
VENUS MAY ONCE HAVE
BEEN HABITABLE
SPACE
model. They combined t his wit h data detailing
conditions of a hypot hetical ea rly Venus, t hen gave it
an atmosphere similar in density to Earth’s, and a
day as long as Venus’s current day (117 Earth days).
“In the simulation, Venus’s slow spin exposes its
dayside to the Sun for almost two months at a time,”
said researcher Anthony Del Genio. “This warms the
surface and produces rain that creates a thick layer of
clouds, which acts like a n umbrella to shield t he
surface from much of the solar heating. The result
means climate temperatures could have actually
been a few degrees cooler than Earth’s today.”
Here’s hoping Earth doesn’t follow in its
neighbour’s footsteps.
“THE CLIMATE
COULD HAVE
BEEN A FEW
DEGREES
COOLER
THAN EARTH’S
TODAY”