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NASA Space

NASA Has Explored Manned Missions To Venus (newsweek.com) 122

NASA recently developed a program for manned missions to explore Venus -- even though the planet's surface is 860 degrees, which NASA explains is "hot enough to melt lead." Long-time Slashdot reader Zorro shares this week's article from Newsweek: As surprising as it may seem, the upper atmosphere of Venus is the most Earth-like location in the solar system. Between altitudes of 30 miles and 40 miles, the pressure and temperature can be compared to regions of the Earth's lower atmosphere. The atmospheric pressure in the Venusian atmosphere at 34 miles is about half that of the pressure at sea level on Earth. In fact you would be fine without a pressure suit, as this is roughly equivalent to the air pressure you would encounter at the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro.

Nor would you need to insulate yourself as the temperature here ranges between 68 degrees Fahrenheit and 86 degrees Fahrenheit. The atmosphere above this altitude is also dense enough to protect astronauts from ionising radiation from space. The closer proximity of the sun provides an even greater abundance of available solar radiation than on Earth, which can be used to generate power (approximately 1.4 times greater).... [C]onceivably you could go for a walk on a platform outside the airship, carrying only your air supply and wearing a chemical hazard suit.

Venus is 8 million miles closer to Earth than Mars (though it's 100 times further away than the moon). But the atmosphere around Venus contains traces of sulphuric acid (responsible for its dense clouds), so the vessel would need to be corrosion-resistant material like teflon. (One NASA paper explored the possibility of airbone microbes living in Venus's atmosphere.) There's a slick video from NASA's Langley Research Center titled "A way to explore Venus" showcasing HAVOC -- "High Altitude Venus Operational Concept."

"A recent internal NASA study...led to the development of an evolutionary program for the exploration of Venus," explains the project's page at NASA.gov, "with focus on the mission architecture and vehicle concept for a 30 day crewed mission into Venus's atmosphere." NASA describes the project as "no longer active," though adding that manned missions to the atmosphere of Venus are possible "with advances in technology and further refinement of the concept."
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NASA Has Explored Manned Missions To Venus

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  • by sarren1901 ( 5415506 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @01:46PM (#57509792)

    We are better off sending drones and satellites with science labs already onboard. This does sound better then a manned mission to Mars though. Being able to build a space craft or space station in the atmosphere of Venus sounds incredible and a whole lot more practical then going to Mars.

    Both seem like overly expensive, resource intensive activities that we would be better off sending more drones.

    • Thank God you are not in NASA or science.
    • The drones could build a cloud city like Lando Calrissian administered above Bespin.

      Once the city is completed, humans could colonize it and begin terraforming Venus from the cloud tops downward.

      This makes way more sense than a Mars colony. Those Mars nutters need to get a grip on reality.

      • So the all the experts focusing for decades mostly on Mars plans because of problems with Venus are "nutters" because a random slashdotter says Venus actually makes more sense....right, that makes sense, too!
      • I don't think I've seen the episode of Twilight Zone to which you refer, but "meh".

        An attempt to terraform Venus would certainly make more sense than trying to terraform Mars, because you wouldn't need to find and transport millions of volatile rich bodies from the outer solar system. Which bodies might simply not exist, or might be spread at multi-million km spacings through the outer 10^30-odd km^3 of the Solar system. Enjoy the hunt - it'll take the rest of your life.

        For Venus, the volatiles are there

      • by Agripa ( 139780 )

        Once the city is completed, humans could colonize it and begin terraforming Venus from the cloud tops downward.

        There is millennia of red heat latent in carbonate formation.

  • Seriously? (Score:5, Funny)

    by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @01:46PM (#57509794)

    As surprising as it may seem, the upper atmosphere of Venus is the most Earth-like location in the solar system.

    Earth is even more Earth-like. I say Venus may be the second most Earth-like location in the solar system.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Well, if we don't do something about CO2 emissions, then Earth will become more Venus like in the future...
    • Venus colonies (Score:5, Interesting)

      by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @02:23PM (#57510000) Homepage
      This has been talked about several times, for example, "Why We Should Build Cloud Cities on Venus," here: https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/539jj5/why-we-should-build-cloud-cities-on-venus [vice.com]
      based on this 2003 paper: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20030022668.pdf [nasa.gov]
  • by zmooc ( 33175 ) <zmooc@zmooc.DEGASnet minus painter> on Saturday October 20, 2018 @01:48PM (#57509804) Homepage

    Nor would you need to insulate yourself as the temperature here ranges between 68 degrees Fahrenheit and 86 degrees Fahrenheit (...)

    I highly doubt that; temperatures in the Fahrenheit-range are found only in a handful of territories on Venus' planetary neighbor.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      Yes, please may Earth leave that system behind... ;)

      Note that comfortable temperatures require either lower atmospheric pressures or high latitudes, ideally a combination of both. This is amplified by the fact that, at least in a Landis habitat, you're living inside a greenhouse, with its own greenhouse effect. Higher latitudes also equate to shorter day lengths. The main limitation on high latitudes appears to be the polar vortices (although we don't yet know just how turbulent they are). High latitudes

  • by Tim the Gecko ( 745081 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @01:52PM (#57509830)

    Basement: Can't see anything outside; able to study radar images and scientific data transmitted from Venus probe; can go outside if necessary; cheap.

    Manned Venus mission: Can't see anything outside; able to study radar images; able to go outside to stand in corrosive acid cloud (assuming you wear the right suit); super-expensive.

    • Re:Not TV friendly (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Rei ( 128717 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @02:41PM (#57510086) Homepage

      So, what you can see depends on the design approach. I'm not a big fan of the HAVOC approach, where people live in a little capsule under the lift envelope; the Landis approach, where people live and farm in the (huge) lift envelope itself makes far more sense. Therein you have a vast, bright open space full of life and where you can live basically wherever you want; the lowest-mass option for crew quarters is just large tents hanging from catenaries (non-rigid) or the frame (rigid). Don't get along with someone? Move half a kilometer away from them, to the opposite side of the habitat.

      What you see outside: With the possible exception of the polar vortices, you never see either the ground or the sun. You have a brightness gradient, where above you is somewhat brighter than below you. You do pass through convective weather systems however that are surprisingly similar to those in Earth's troposphere. We don't know at this point whether there's any precipitation or frosts in these (that's how pathetically little we know about Venus : The data from the Vega balloons has alternately been argued to confirm or deny precipitation and/or frosts), but as far as what you'd see, these clouds would be visible, albeit in relatively low contrast.

      As for stepping outside: barring precipitation (which, as mentioned, we don't know whether it actually exists), the outside environment isn't like a sulfuric acid bath. It's several to several dozen mg/m^3 of sulfuric acid mists. By contrast, OSHA allows people to breathe up to 1 mg/m^3 for an entire 8-hour shift. Now, the acid concentration on Venus is higher than it would be on Earth (H2SO4 is highly hygroscopic and absorbs moisture from the air to self-dilute), but the key takeaway is, the environment is more like a very bad smog (or more accurately, vog). The H2SO4 is far more of a resource than a hazard, and it would actually be convenient if it were more common (heating first drives off free H2O; further heating decomposes H2SO4 to SO3 + H2O; and further heating of SO3 over a vanadium oxide catalyst decomposes it to SO2 and O2; contrarily, SO3 can be reused in the gas scrubber as a nucleating agent to help capture free H2O after doing an initial electrostatic and/or ionic liquid scrubbing of the H2SO4 mists).

      • Therein you have a vast, bright open space full of life and where you can live basically wherever you want; the lowest-mass option for crew quarters is just large tents hanging from catenaries (non-rigid) or the frame (rigid). Don't get along with someone? Move half a kilometer away from them, to the opposite side of the habitat.

        You can't do this on Earth - live where ever you want. Why would this be possible in the far, far more space constrained Venus colony structure?

        On any off-world colony, where all available space is part of a man-made structure (and in this case all space not just habitable living space) it will be at a premium and will be strictly allocated by a management/legal system (like land, or apartments, or offices, here on Earth).

        The lifting capacity of Venus's atmosphere does not lead to living on an almost empty

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          What do you mean you can't move anywhere you want on Earth? Of course you can. I could move half a kilometer away from where I'm at tomorrow if I wanted to.

          On any off-world colony, where all available space is part of a man-made structure (and in this case all space not just habitable living space) it will be at a premium

          It doesn't work that way, at least until you get to extremely large habitats. The amount of volume you need for lift means that the overwhelming amount of your habitat is empty space. I

      • by mmutka ( 5495542 )
        One reason of putting people in a gondola under the balloon is because people and their equipment are much denser than air. In a passive scenario or the slow thrust of a dirigible, the righting torque of a buoyant body comes from the distance between the center of buoyancy and the center of gravity. Dirigible balloons are "flattened" vertically, which brings the center of buoyancy even closer. This is why in many early dirigible designs had the gondola suspended by rope a few meters below the balloon, incre
        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          The bulk mass certainly needs to be at the bottom, for stability reasons. But the mass isn't humans, or even agriculture; it's the ascent vehicle. More specifically, the propellant in the ascent vehicle. Particularly if you're using chemical rockets (as opposed to nuclear thermal), you're looking at something like 90% of your mass in the ascent stage on the underside. Where you put everything else is pretty much irrelevant in comparison.

          • But the mass isn't humans, or even agriculture; it's the ascent vehicle. More specifically, the propellant in the ascent vehicle.Or, or a long term mission, the heavy life support machinery (the equivalent of Biosphere 1 & 2's "oceans") hangs down there. Along with any "ascent vehicle" that you're in the process of refuelling, for those faint hearts and administrators (or non-convicts) who might want to go back to Earth.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @02:04PM (#57509894) Homepage

    NASA has probably "explored" interstellar flight too, it doesn't mean it's anywhere near ready to go. Right now the US can't even send people to the ISS. Of course hand-waving is sometimes useful like "if we ignore all the problems of getting to Mars, what's the problems we have on Mars" but you got to take that into account. Sure at the right altitude Venus orbit is relatively human friendly. It doesn't mean we have the means to get people from Earth to there or back again. And we'd probably have to build the ship much more protected for the crew to survive the trip, so it would just be to go outside in order to go outside. Unlike Mars, where we could actually do something outside the ship.

  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @02:06PM (#57509902) Journal
    Automated Submarine/balloon would make sense for doing a mission.
    • She seems qualified enough by her first name and could help reaching diversity goals at NASA.
    • by Strider- ( 39683 )

      Been done already. The Soviet Vega probes deployed balloons into the Venus atmosphere. They were tracked from earth until they went behind the far side of the planet.

  • What are the resources in the clouds above Venus? How do you get the raw materials to maintain the balloons? What's the economy there? What's the draw? How come we're not living in blimps floating above Earth?

    The one thing I see is more solar gain for energy, but that's better gotten in space. Terraforming? Even if you screened the planet from the sun entirely, it would take vast amounts of time for the heat trapped in the atmosphere to dissipate.

    Venus seems like the hot version of Antarctica; a place for l

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      What are the resources in the clouds above Venus?

      Chapter 5 [venuslabs.org]

      How do you get the raw materials to maintain the balloons?

      Chapter 8.

      What's the economy there? What's the draw?

      Chapter 8.

      How come we're not living in blimps floating above Earth?

      People live in the easiest location where it is to live, near where there's economic activity to sustain their presence. See Chapter 8 re: economic activity, and if you think you have an easier location to base operations for accessing Venus's resources than an aerostat ha

  • The melting point of lead is 327,5 C.

  • by Grog6 ( 85859 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @03:48PM (#57510320)

    Use several large asteroids, then some smaller ones...

    Step 1: Blow of 90% of the atmosphere with a large heavy asteroid.
    You could also tip the planet a bit, and add some spin.

    Step 2: Hit it with another asteroid heavy enough to penetrate the planet, spinning the core to create a magnetic field to protect Immigrants from Earth.

    Step 3: Hit it with slower moving asteroids built up of various frozen gasses and water, until there are global oceans.

    Step 4: Wait for it to cool off a bit, after the Re-engineering step.
    Profit!

    This is what we should be planning; deorbiting things to the inner solar system is easy if you don't need to slow down at the end. :)

    I wonder if I can get funding...

    • by Zumbs ( 1241138 )
      That ... is a seriously long term endeavor!
      • It's a terraforming effort. Of course it's long term. Tens to hundreds of millennia, on the low side. And that's probably optimistic.
    • Step 1 - that's going to be pretty tricky. Judging from the work that has been done w.r.t Earth, you're looking at an impactor around the size of Mars.

      Now, don't get me wrong - I don't have any intrinsic objection to using Mars to terraform Venus. But some of the people left on Earth might be a little concerned about you manoeuvring such a lump of rock past their windows. Maybe move them out somewhere else while you're doing the "heavy lifting".

      Step 2Hmm, you're going to have to move around 80% of the ma

  • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @04:45PM (#57510522) Homepage Journal

    you could go for a walk on a platform outside the airship, carrying only your air supply and wearing a chemical hazard suit.

    Shiiiit!

    What?

    I dropped the keys!

  • I started Venus Labs http://venuslabs.org/ [venuslabs.org] to research and promote exactly this idea! Join us and we can live in stratospheric penthouses on Venus, rather than basement tunnels on Mars...
  • by MerlinTheWizard ( 824941 ) on Saturday October 20, 2018 @08:27PM (#57511200)
    We haven't messed enough of the universe yet. There's no reason earth should be our only trash can! :D
  • Venus has a weak magnetic field compared to earth. Current scientific opinion seems to be that earth's magnetic field is what kept earth from losing its atmosphere the way Mars did.
    https://astronomy.stackexchange.com/questions/10189/why-did-venus-not-lose-its-atmosphere-without-magnetic-field [stackexchange.com]

    • More ikely the issue with Mars is that it's only about 1/10 the mass of Earth (0.1075 from my notebook) so it's just a lot easier for the atmosphere to get ablated. Yes, the lack of magnetic field is a component of Mars' atmospheric loss, but not the main one.
  • Let's not got to Venus. Do we really need to add a fourth country to the list of those who can't switch to bloody medieval measurement units?

  • by Lynchenstein ( 559620 ) on Sunday October 21, 2018 @07:46AM (#57512478)
    Gawd I'm old.

"...a most excellent barbarian ... Genghis Kahn!" -- _Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure_

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