Venus: The Forgotten Planet 419
Anonymous Coward from Winnipeg writes "These days many of us are consumed by daily batches of spectacular images from our twin Marsbots and international fleet of Mars-orbiting craft. But we should not forget our sister planet, Venus, which has undergone significant exploration in years past. Don P. Mitchell's home page features an intriguing refinement of Soviet surface images using modern reprocessing techniques. Don also includes a terrific overview of the Soviet Venus exploration program. Complete radar mapping of Venus was provided by Magellan ten years ago. Sadly, according to the Venus Exploration Timeline, only two new missions to Venus are envisioned: ESA's Venus Express (using leftover Mars Express and Rosetta equipment) and JAXA's Planet-C orbiter. Apparently, no landings on Venus are planned - is this another case of humanity losing advanced space travel capability due to neglect, like Apollo?" (We've mentioned Mitchell's reworked images before -- amazing stuff.)
venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:2, Interesting)
and mars for the planet that gets the most, outside of ours...
Re:venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:3, Informative)
Venus is even hotter than Mercury (Score:3, Informative)
Re:venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:5, Interesting)
So it's pretty much totally worthless for the coming centuries. Mars is a different story. While its atmosphere is toxic and its air pressure too low the temperature around the equator wouldn't bother a Canadian (gets above freezing at times). It also has water. Pretty decent planet.
Re:venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:3, Interesting)
We will have to speed up the axial rotation of the planet, well, maybe it is possible by using directed nuclear ex
Re:venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:4, Interesting)
Venus has vritually zero magentic field so
In fact, the main reason for Venus not being ever suitable for terraforming (at least on its sunny side) is that there is no magnetic field so the first solar flare will irradiate to death any leaving creature there. This is the first problem to be solved for terraforming it. It is a catch 22 situation - in order to to convert Venus CO2 and H2SO4 atmosphere into something useable it has to be populated with algae and bacteria. In order for them to function they need solar energy. If they get in the Sun on Venus they die because there is no protection from high energy particles.
Re:venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:3, Interesting)
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/ven usfact.html - compare Venus and Earth. These planets are very much ali
Venus will never be very suitable for terraforming (Score:3, Insightful)
Err yeah. I think you've been watching too many Sci Fi B-movies. Thanks for playing...
Re:venus is a forgotten planet? (Score:3, Funny)
It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:5, Funny)
Except Europa, of course.
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:5, Interesting)
We don't know much about what technology would make such things possible, but if you draw even a straight line curve from the technology of the past, such as wood heated boilers, through today (fission), and extrapolate, the time till we can spruce up Mars is only a hundred years or so.
Terraforming Venus, on the other hand, takes changing that long rotation. Even if we could strip off the existing atmosphere, and replace it with 15 PSI worth of 70 some odd % Nitrogen, 22% Oxygen, etc., the Venusian day is so long that such an atmosphere would freeze out on the night side.
Even if we can sustain a technological growth rate that may be just plain impossible in the long run, Mars will be doable generations before Venus.
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:5, Insightful)
*cough* Actually we have the power today. When one considers that space travelers' lives depend on energy, one realizes that Nuclear Fission is pretty much a requirement for space travel.
We don't know much about what technology would make such things possible, but if you draw even a straight line curve from the technology of the past, such as wood heated boilers, through today (fission), and extrapolate, the time till we can spruce up Mars is only a hundred years or so.
This is difficult, because the technology already exists for getting to Mars. Unfortunately, our society has been stopping technological progress in favor of the idea that everything must be "safe". So much so, that dangers are percieved where none exist. What people *want* is a Star Trek technology that glosses over how dangerous that much power actually is.
Even if we can sustain a technological growth rate that may be just plain impossible in the long run, Mars will be doable generations before Venus.
No argument here. I was just pointing out that Mars is more interesting *because* it doesn't need to be terraformed. Terraforming is still one of those "on the drawing board" type of things. Simple blimps flying around Venus would be a more viable option. With the extreme pressure of the atmosphere, it's even possible to build floating islands for exploration.
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:5, Interesting)
Eh? Are you kidding? It seems like in every other episode of Star Trek that I watched the ship's Warp Core was going to self-destruct and needed to be fixed before it had to be ejected... or there was a matter/anti-matter collision explosion somewhere in engineering. (Granted, they used the latter more often in the original series). Hell, even their phasers were always overloading and being left somewhere to explode, killing a red-shirt or to.
No sirree, I don't think people want a Star Trek technology world at all. :)
- P.M.
Dangers of warp cores and fusion reactors. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:4, Interesting)
IANAB - I am not a biologist, but I know they have found bacteria living in very inhospitable areas, including mid-ocean vents. Some even survived a few years on the moon! Venus is not too unlike Earth was at the time life first arose. All we would have to do to start the ball rolling is unleash some genetically engineered bacteria that would thrive in the Venusian atmosphere, use a form of photosynthesis to convert the mostly CO2 atmosphere to oxygen and sugar, the way plant life does on earth. This would cool the atmosphere, and allow at least some of the the water in the atmosphere reach the surface. (Venusian clouds are sufuric acid)
Perhaps introduced bacteria could convert the sulfur in the clouds to something harmless or perhaps even useful.
Pushing one or two of Saturn's icy moonlets out of orbit and into a collision course would provide all the remaining water terraformers would need.
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:4, Insightful)
Not only that there are management issues. NASA is already going insane trying to keep the two Mars rovers operational and funded. Chances are they're not going to spend a couple extra billion dollars on another planet which gets no PR.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Terraforming ain't so easy. (Score:5, Interesting)
We *do* have the tech. Sort of. We can generate enough energy to be zipping around the solar system, displacing asteroids and comets. We have even built some of the engine designs that give us that kind of power. (Although only the weaker ones have been built.) Most of the resistance to these technologies is poltical. (Don't dare mention "nuclear" as a propulsion method. Even if you're talking about using it in space, some people are whacked enough to start complaining about "polluting space". Sheesh.)
As for knowledge, most of the terraforming ideas are based on a "close enough" approach. It's assumed that once we get things to that state, then some of the more exotic Earth lifeforms could begin to get a foothold. (i.e. extremophiles) Whether it would actually pan out or not would be "the great experiment".
Interestingly enough, Venus may be easier to terraform than Mars. Mars has less atmosphere and little ability to hold more. Venus on the other hand, has too much atmosphere. Microbes exist that could exist on Venus (at least flosting, perhaps actually on the ground). As they convert CO2 to O2, the soil would begin to absorb the excess O2. In theory, Venus's atmosphere could be thinned greatly just by making it more habitable for Earth life.
There's also the asteroid-to-rip-away-atmosphere idea that I gave in another post. Personally, I'd be a little reluctant to try that route until it was shown that other methods fail.
Re:Terraforming ain't so easy. (Score:3, Insightful)
Forget about the nuclear issue. If we develop the technology to aim asteroids and comets at a planet, would then have the ability to wipe out every living thing on thi
Re:Terraforming ain't so easy. (Score:3, Interesting)
Surely you've heard of stealth technology. Wrap it up in a black plastic cube.
And that the U.S. government has more technology to redirect the asteriods than anyone who gets out there to redirect the thing at us?
I'm not talking about the short term. Look at all of the shit that's gone down over the last 5000 years of history. There probably isn't going to be a "U.S. government" 10,000 years from now. Sure, the risk
Re:Terraforming ain't so easy. (Score:4, Insightful)
That isn't even close to accurate.
The surface temperature of Venus is about 900 degrees F. Although the greenhouse effect of the CO2-rich atmosphere is commonly cited as the main cause, another critical contributor is the extremely low rotation speed. One Venutian day lasts for 243 Earth days. This means the sun shines on the exact same spot of Venus for very, very long periods of time. The greenhouse effect plays into it by reflecting back a lot of that heat energy, but you're not going to be able to speed up the rotation of the planet. Even if you could figure out how to magically reduce 90% of the atmospheric pressure (Earth is about 14.5 PSI, whereas Venus is about 1500 PSI), a sunny day on Venus would be deadly.
The carbon dioxide atmosphere is also supplanted by a series of sulfuric acid cloud layers (each of which are many miles thick), as well as pools of liquid sulfuric acid on the surface. If that isn't challenging enough, intense microwave radiation is emitted from the surface, and all of that heat and pressure also means any water moisture which ever existed boiled away a long, long time ago (excepting small amounts of deuterium). Venus is largely devoid of hydrogen. Thus, even if you managed to deal with the atmospheric pressure and heat, you'd still be left with nothing but a bone-dry planet.
Carl Sagan suggested in 1960 that we might terraform Venus by seeding the atmosphere with hypothetical tailored bacteria to remove CO2. At the time, the surface was thought to be around 300-400 F, but now we know that organically-fixated carbon would be liberated as CO2 again, once it fell into the 900 F furnace that is the lower atmosphere.
Thus, Venus would certainly NOT be easier to terraform than Mars, even if we had any idea how to actually terraform in the first place. In fact, the surface of Mercury is probably more hospitable.
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:5, Interesting)
Riiigghhhttt... And just how do you propose to pump the atomosphere? You're trying to pull it *out* of a gravity well. You'd need approximately the same amount of energy for every kilogram of atmosphere that it takes to launch a kilogram of stuff to Earth escape velocity.
A much better option is microbes. If you can get some microbes to start changing CO2 into oxygen, a lot of the O2 will be absorbed by the soil. I can't say how much (or if it will even be enough), but it would be a start.
The only problem with that sort of terraforming is that it would tend to do irreparable damage to the geologic history of the planet. As a result, the whole thing is a bit of a "give and take" type of situation.
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:4, Interesting)
If you're really set on the idea of extracting a portion of Venus's atmosphere, there's a better (and more feasible) way than nanotubes or chemicals. Simply look for an asteroid on a near-pass course. If you catch it early enough, you should be able to use a couple of nukes to "nudge" its orbit so that it passes extremely close. As it passes, the asteroid's gravity will cause a extremely strong gravitational tide that will litterally rip away part of the atmosphere.
Here's the tough part. The asteroid has to be large enough to have a strong enough gravitational pull, plus it has to have a high enough initial velocity to not get trapped in Venus's gravity and become another moon. Given the close proximity of Venus to the Sun, it may take awhile before a good one shows up.
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:5, Insightful)
In this century and the next, we should pick our targets for maximum scientific benefit, not for the possibility of colonization.
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, it may be technologically possible to put a colony on Mars even within a couple of centuries. But that simply has no bearing on where we send our planetary probes today. If Venus were scientifically more
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:5, Interesting)
In the case of Venus, the question is, then, "why bother landing?" Why not just build yourself a balloon that floats around at some convenient altitude where it's not so hot, below the H2SO4 clouds so you can see the ground, perhaps occasionally deploying gliders or whatever to go down to the surface....
A subsequent
[ The submersibles like the Trieste used "balloons" filled with gasoline to supply bouyancy; the gasoline was not crushed by the terrific pressure down there. Then by shedding ballast, the subermisibles could return to the surface. ]
Re:It's not forgotten, just more expensive (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm afraid you haven't been looking too closely at the imaging and cloud density data that the websites above explain. There aren't "clouds" like on Earth -- chubby, fat little suckers that we have. On Venus, it's just a giant, very slow-moving morass of gas. The Sulpher-rich "clouds" are more like fog. The heavy pressure makes "walking" on the surface like deep-sea diving on the surface of the ocean floors. But you're never going to get much better vis
BepiColombo (Score:4, Informative)
The real question is WHY (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The real question is WHY (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The real question is WHY (Score:5, Interesting)
The planet is thought to have been completely resurfaced around 500 million years ago, with relatively little geological activity since then. Why?
And the biggest question of all, how did the atmosphere & surface temperature of Venus evolve? Was it ever a place that had Earth-like surface conditions (liquid water)? Could it ever have supported life? Was a runaway greenhouse effect an inescapable consequence of receiving ~2x the solar radiation of Earth, or did Earth escape that fate due to the fact that biological activity has been sequestering CO2 for hundreds of millions of years?
In terms of planetary evolution, Venus, Mars & Earth seem to be the too hot, too cold, just right examples. Is the hospitibility of our planet due completely to the luck of its position at 1 AU from the sun, or did other factors come into play (stabilization of Earth's rotation & climate by our large Moon, for example)?
There's a lot we still don't know about our solar system, and Venus is a vital piece of that puzzle. If it's all about resources or human habitation, no, Venus isn't an attractive destination. But scientifically, it is key.
Re:The real question is WHY (Score:4, Funny)
The aliens screwed up their first attempt at planting humans, and decided to flush Venus clean and try a new colony on Earth. I think they are reaching for the handle again.
Re:The real question is WHY (Score:5, Insightful)
Opening up new horizons is part of fixing the problems on Earth. Not only is the space program generating research that is highly applicable to current Earthly problems*, it is also providing for an eventual safety valve where disaffected members of society can go off to a Moon or Mars colony to start a new life rather than remaining on crowded Earth.
An example of this can be seen in the early pioneering days of the United States. Sure it was a tough, difficult, and often deadly trip west but many people did it anyways in order to start off new. Many of those people had been feeling stifled in the eastern cities and so they went west, relieving the social caldrons which were beginning to boil over.
The fact that there was an open frontier allowed people to be innovative and to take a chance that they might get a piece of land of their own and maybe even have their own business. It provided the poorest person with the opportunity to be successful and to pass their success on to their children. When there are no frontiers this is much harder to do.
* Such as medicine, hydroponics, closed ecosystems, energy sources, micro-mechanization, robotics, etc.
Re:The real question is WHY (Score:4, Insightful)
What good do lessons about ecology do us when we don't apply them? We have more than enough technology to solve the problems here on earth--the obstacles are purely social and political. Colonizing Mars isn't going to solve that.
it is also providing for an eventual safety valve where disaffected members of society can go off to a Moon or Mars colony to start a new life rather than remaining on crowded Earth.
A six months interplanetary trip followed by enormously expensive life support is supposed to be a "safety valve"? Sorry, but you are naive.
An example of this can be seen in the early pioneering days of the United States. Sure it was a tough, difficult, and often deadly trip west but many people did it anyways in order to start off new. Many of those people had been feeling stifled in the eastern cities and so they went west, relieving the social caldrons which were beginning to boil over.
First of all, the US was, in many ways, a paradise: abundant wildlife, good climate, rich soils. Second, many people came lured by false advertising: despite nearly ideal conditions, life was indeed harsh (as life tends to be without tools and infrastructure). Third, emigration to the US hardly did much "relieving" for the countries where people emigrated from; quite to the contrary, after being a dumping ground for dopes and criminals initially, the US soon took away many of their most enterprising citizens, a "brain drain" that continues to this day. This continues to benefit the US at the cost of everybody else.
Of course, none of that is relevant to Mars: Mars is far less suitable for colonization than the Sahara desert, the top of Mount Everest, or the Antarctic. And in addition to that, it's much more costly to reach.
We either fix things here on earth or we die: colonization of other planets is not a viable alternative over the next couple of centuries at least.
Mars is a Prospect for Money (Score:5, Insightful)
There are also those who of course, believe that Mars is chiefly where we will dump those extra billions of people we are going to have in the next 100 years.
But Venus should not be forgotten, it is a legitimate testing ground for technology and a potential "gold mine" in itself.
Re:Mars is a Prospect for Money (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mars is a Prospect for Money (Score:5, Interesting)
Mars would be colder than Antarctica most of the time.
Mars [asi.org]Antarctica [leeds.ac.uk]
And Antarctica does better in the oxygen and water availability stakes.
Re:Mars is a Prospect for Money (Score:3, Interesting)
At least venus can eventually be terraformed when we develop such technology to do so. Mars doesn't have much hope of being terraformed because it lacks the gravity to keep an atmosphere in place.
Re:Mars is a Prospect for Money (Score:5, Insightful)
You're gonna ship African and Indian street kids to Mars by the billions? Because that's where those "extra billions" come from. It's not going to happen.
There are only two ways we will deal with the population explosion: family planning and social changes on the one hand, or disease and starvation on the other.
Re:Mars is a Prospect for Money (Score:3, Insightful)
The population explosion has already happened, btw. With current technology we won't be able to support the 6 billion or so of us around today at today's standard of living (even though billions today have a pretty poor way of life) for more than a century. The whole premise for our civilization is that it's ok to burn through our forests, water, and oil because technology will find a solution before we run out.
And if we don't find a solution
Landing on Venus (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Landing on Venus (Score:2, Informative)
cloudy venus (Score:2, Interesting)
having said that, we have seen amazing ground-penetrating technology used on Mars Rovers. So maybe some of these gears can be re-used?
it'll be rather amusing if Venus does have lives kicking under the thick cloud as we speak, but we failed to further investigate it
There's a good reason we choose Mars, not Venus (Score:5, Insightful)
Try surface temperatures in the range of 400-500 degrees C, and watch closely as that poor overclocked Pentium powering the robot overheats like an Eskimo who's in Rio de Janiero to watch the carneval.
Thanks, I'd rather try for Mars first, with temperatures in the much more comfortable range for Earth-invented technology. Hell, we don't even have to shield it for temperature most of the time, as it is just marginally cooler on Mars and the electronics gives off some heat by itself to stay warm.
Correction, again (Score:4, Informative)
First, it's "Kelvin", never "degrees Kelvin". 750 Kelvin. Be careful with that -- it's one of the signs you can tell people you don't really know the subject you're talking about.
Second, a Kelvin can be defined as the equivalent degree Celsius, plus 283.15. 750 Kelvin equals about 450 degrees Celsius.
If I'm not mistaken, I wrote "in the 400-500 degrees Celsius range"? How would this be way out?
Venus harbors life? (Score:3, Interesting)
If life can exist there, it's more than likely that similar life could exist on Venus with its very extreme environment and bountiful liquid (unlike dry Mars).
Could the Soviet explorers have found primitive life there and for fear of starting widespread panic decided to keep the whole thing quiet. Just declare that Mars is the target for the future and keep Venus missions underwraps?
It's a little bit tin-foil inducing, but considering that Venus has water which we have 'decided' is one of the fundamental building blocks of life, could it be so far fetched that life spontaneously originated there on its own?
Re:Venus harbors life? (Score:2)
Re:Venus harbors life? (Score:5, Insightful)
The most stupidest conspiracy theories are governments keeping alien life "quiet".
If there would be any evidence for alien life - or even intelligent life out there, the governments would profit the most because it's a good reason to raise taxes for military, etc.
The thought that the government would keep the cover over something that a) clearly isn't their fault, b) is possibly an external threat for which c) only the government has an adequate fix, is pretty dumb, IMO.
I'm all for conspiracies, but there must be some kind of motive behind it.
Re:Venus harbors life? (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree that there are some forms of bacteria that could survive on Venus. A more basic question is whether life could originate under such conditions, and I've never seen anyone address that question. I would be interested to know if anyone else has.
Re:Venus harbors life? (Score:5, Insightful)
The discovery and study of extremophiles has actually been a huge boon to those advancing theories of life on other worlds. The range of life on Earth is mind-boggling, with many organisms and animals which are at least as "alien" as anything that might be found on Venus or Jupiter or whereever. The basic point being, if they can go into places on Earth where life absolutely, positively, could not possibly be, and find life anyway, it suddenly becomes hard to summarily rule out ANY location.
the question is why (Score:3, Interesting)
mars gets the most because its the closest that might be able to support its own life
europa isn't a planet but it still gets points for life, however its farther than mars
venus is close but doesn't have a chance of life as we think of it. Venus does however have excellent energy harvesting/producing possibilities as soon as we are more space capable
Reflects Rational Use of Resources (Score:5, Interesting)
It is a function of limited resources and the obvious sense that Mars is more likely to have been, or be, hospitable to life than Venus.
Venus (Score:2, Interesting)
Venus isn't as interesting as Mars... (Score:5, Interesting)
In contrast, Mars is much simpler: domes to hold atmosphere in (with the possibility of terraforming to make a breathable atmosphere), and you're pretty much there.
After Mars, there is a good prospect of moving on to Jovian moons, possibly Saturn's moons as well. Venus, however, doesn't have much to offer us until we've had a chance to refine our space-going technology with Mars and Jovian adventures.
Amazing (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Amazing (Score:2)
The thick atmosphere would protect the surface from meteoric impacts, even more than ours does...
Re:Amazing (Score:5, Informative)
I have seen a design for a long-lived lander which uses an RTG (nuclear power) instead of batteries, to run a refrigerator and the rest of the gadgets for months or years.
Good reasons to not land on Venus. (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, on Venus, the surface temperature is about 750'K - 900'F. now, a server room conks out at a LOT lower temperatures than that. And... did you want to build the lander out of mostly metal? Might not be so smart - it rains sulfuric acid all the time on Venus. That's nasty stuff if you're a lander. Oh, and solar power is out - that sulfuric acid rain comes from a pretty thick cloud cover.
We're also exploring Mars because it seems to be a RELATIVElY Earth-like planet - in that, maybe we can make it work for permanent human habitation.
Venus would just require radically new technology to land on, which isn't smart because the scientific benefits, while real, could be eclipsed in terms of */$ (bang per buck) on other places. And it doesn't look like humans are EVER going to live there. IMHO, the biggest problem that the space program now has is capturing our imagination - a preparing for humans on Mars does it, studying volcanoes on Venus is interesting, but doesn't scratch the human itch for exploration as well.
Re:Good reasons to not land on Venus. (Score:5, Insightful)
Or you could ask the Russians how the Venera landers worked. I know NIH is a big problem for some people, but overcoming a bit of parochialism never hurt anyone.
Re:Good reasons to not land on Venus. (Score:2)
Easy to land, hard to survive (Score:5, Informative)
Its actually ridiculously easy to land on Venus. You don't even need a parachute. The Venera craft didn't use parachutes they just had a dish shaped structure at the top like an umbrella and in the enormously dense atmosphere that was enough to slow the craft to landing speed. However, once there surviving is very difficult, the major problem is the heat. We can build craft to go down 11 km in our oceans, and survive sulphuric acid environments no problem ... but you can't keep an object permanently cold (or cold for extended periods) in such a hot environment.
I'm sure Venus has an interesting history and is worth exploring one day. But probably not for a while. Though the pics are very intriguing.
The real reason they haven't explored Venus (Score:5, Funny)
layman alert (Score:4, Funny)
What if we sent some torpedo to Venus that somehow magically scooped all the atmosphere off. Here's my question: Would it come back on its own, or would it be gone forever?
Name a crater? (Score:5, Interesting)
I had a friend working with NASA when they were naming geological features on the surface of Venus. Since all features were named after women, I managed him to persuade him to name a crater after my girlfriend, as a birthday present to her. Not bad, Venus being the planet of love and all that -- and certainly better than naming a star (star-naming companies are scammers, their catalogues are not recognised [iau.org] by the IAU).
The only drawback, of course, is she's not my girlfriend anymore. However, every time I see Venus on my evening cycle home from work, I'm reminded of her and the crater. Fond memories indeed!
Re:mod down (Score:3, Interesting)
Interesting, especially in light of a previous post indicating that there aren't any craters visible on Venus.
Further to my previous response to this false assertion, this page [nasa.gov] on the Magellan website discusses the fact that small craters on Venus have been assigned female first names.
Re:How did the Russians name a crater? (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm. Out of idle curiosity, did the Russians also name things after women only? I'm assuming that since they sent so many probes there they must also have claimed some naming rights.
I'm not sure how extensively their Venera missions actually mapped the surface (remembering that you have to do the mapping in radar, not in visible light, due to the dense cloud cover). If you can't see it, then you can't name it -- so their being able to name things really does depend on the mapping capabilities aboard th
I know how did the Russians name a crater! (Score:4, Informative)
Craters [usgs.gov] though are! Sadly Melissa is not on the list.
Actually, check out the whole USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature [usgs.gov]. It's very cool.
Possibly offtopic, but (Score:4, Insightful)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0
Scary.
Maybe we could go and live there (Score:5, Funny)
I know that the continual 1200 F sulfuric acid rain is a bummer.
Maybe we could nuke the planet into a nuclear winter to cool it down?
I think I'm going to patent it.
Venus is hell... (Score:3, Redundant)
Our first objective in exploring the universe is answering the "are we alone" question. If we can find something as simple as bacteria on another planet, then it sets the groundwork for finding other more highly evolved forms of life. We just need to really prove that life is out there. I have zero doubt that there is, but we still have to proove it.
Once we find aliens, fine, then it might be neat to look at Venus.
Venus - The forgotten planet! (Score:4, Funny)
MARVEL at the wonders of the future!
EXPERIENCE the mysteries of the forgotten planet.
Our biggest threat came from our very own solar system.
Arrive 30 minutes prior to the movie to receive a FREE stale popcorn and a lukewarm coke
Did anyone anyone think cheap sci-fi feature when reading the heading?
Why are there no Venus landers? (Score:5, Interesting)
Perhaps this is the reason why we have not seen Venus landers:
Venus today is a scorching, hell-like place -- totally dry, with a surface temperature hotter than the melting point of zinc (800 degrees F) and an enormously heavy, largely carbon dioxide atmosphere, 100 times as dense as Earth's.
I don't know for certain but I imagine that would complicate things enourmously.
Venus is a difficult target... (Score:5, Informative)
If we can learn to land on Mars with a much better track record, than perhapds will we be advanced enough to start building probes to explore Venus. But at 400 million a pop, I don't think anyone will want to pay for a whole five minutes of time on Venus just yet.
/ headlines/2001/venus.html
see:
http://www.planetary.org/html/news/articlearchive
Interesting stuff at the website not just Venus (Score:4, Informative)
Theres much more to it than just Venus - though the material supplied on that subject is pretty damn good.
Nikola Tesla; Rockets; Ion engines; lots of cool stuff. Explore the site - really fascinating stuff.
Probe Eater Plus (Score:5, Insightful)
No, I think it's more a case of space agencies not wanting to toss their multi-million dollar probes into a nintey atmosphere, 850 F (450 C) cloud of sulphuric acid 850 F (450 C)where probe lifespans are measured in hours. The cost to knowledge-gain ratio is staggeringly out of proportion on those missions. At least on mars you stand a decent chance of getting a return on your investment.
It's more a case of space agencies saying "Yep, that's nasty stuff. Let's move on for now."
Moon & Venus Pairing (Score:5, Informative)
Time for some re-evaluation (Score:5, Interesting)
TIMMs [hts-homepage.de]
Venus is the obvious choice (Score:4, Interesting)
Venus and Bio-teraformation (Score:5, Interesting)
Venus will be the first extraterestrial body that we will terraform.
This will be accomplished by bio-engineering a class of organisms that will have the following characteristics:
1) Asexual reproduction.
2) Sulphur/oxygen/carbon based metaboism.
3) Builds "Balloon" cells so it can "float" in the CO2 sea that is the venusian atmosphere.
4) Short life span.
5) The discarded Carbon/Sulphur/Nitrogen skeleton must not ignite, returning the CO2 back into the atmosphere.
These organisms will be introduced into the the Venusian atmosphere by floating, automated seeding ships. In a few hundred years we oughtta be able to move in there.
What we can do about the crappy weak magnetic field and the six month long days and nights, I haven't got a fucking clue.
acutally its Mercury... (Score:4, Interesting)
all had multiple probes in the past 20-25 years. Same
with Venus, and Mars.. well we can't throw enough junk
at that rock. AFAIK, Mariner 10 was the one and only,
and that only made 2 or 3 passes after getting a boost
after a Venus rest stop.
Not forgotten, but shelved (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Venus: An Enigma (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Venus: An Enigma (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Venus: An Enigma (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Venus: An Enigma (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Venus: An Enigma (Score:5, Interesting)
Beyond even just the well publicized extremes of temperature and pressure, any life-form on Venus would have to contend with heavy metal snow [wustl.edu] and clouds made of sulfuric acid [everything2.net]. While I'm sure that we have separate varieties of extremophiles on Earth that can cope with each of these challenges separately, creating a synthesis of these traits would require significantly greater experience with practical genetic engineering as well as significant funding. We just don't have the funds right now to return Venus' friendship, which I'm sure is a situation that
Re:Venus: An Enigma (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.russianspaceweb.com/venera75.html
As for it being "stripped down", consider that they used a Proton to launch the thing, and could send over 5 tons of payload to Venus. Both Venera-9 and -10 were around 5,000 kg mass. The lander proper was about 660 kg, with a 900 kg protective shell. Put stuff in a one-ton steel sphere, and it tends to be protected from pressure. The surface temperature of 450 C is not really all that high, nowhere near enough to melt iron or steel, and certainly not much compared to the temperature during entry. (I'd say "re-entry", but of course the lander hadn't been there before...)
One interesting feature of the lander was that it was in free fall from 50 kilometers up, and hit the ground doing about 7 meters/sec. Airbags? We don't need no stinkin' airbags!
Re:Venus: An Enigma (Score:2, Insightful)
Recreate at home (Score:2, Funny)
2. open sound recorder, on your `leet XP box
3. blow into above microphone
4. ???
5. Die
Damn, the idiots are out tonight. Maybe a full moon? or is it a full Venus?
Re:"Our" marsbots?? (Score:3, Funny)
I suppose the French can lay an equal claim to them too?
The really great thing is that after America is consigned to the history books under the heading 'Other empires of note', the scientific benefits will still be there ...
the outer outer planets... (Score:5, Informative)
At least Cassini [nasa.gov] is going to Saturn. I can't wait for that, especially the probe to Titan.
I really wish more probes would go to Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto. I find them absolutely fascinating. I guess it's a cold temperature thing--I'm fascinated by cold.
I really hope I'm alive to see the New Horizons [jhuapl.edu] misson arrive at Pluto. I think I've come to the decision that I'm going to make every effort to keep myself alive until I can see pictures of Pluto. That's going to be absolutely amazing.
Not that Pluto is such an impressive planet--or planetoid?--just that to actually see it would be such an impressive feat.