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Hopes of finding life on Venus are dashed in new study


Hopes of finding life on Venus are dashed in new study
Dan Avery For Dailymail.com
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Scientists have sucked the life out of a theory suggesting Venus could be home to biological organisms.
In September, researchers claimed to have detected trace amounts of phosphine gas in the planet s acidic clouds.
Phosphine is often released by microorganisms on Earth that don t use oxygen to breath, which led scientists to speculate Venus could be harboring life.
In a new study, however, scientists claim it wasn t phosphine that was detected, but ordinary sulfur dioxide 
The team determined that the initial detection did not come from the hellish planet s cloud layer, but in the upper atmosphere where molecules would be destroyed within seconds - blaming the confusion on a miscalibration of a radio telescope. ....

Jane Greaves , Clara Sousa Silva , Alex Akins , Andrew Lincowski , Goddard Space Flight Center , Propulsion Laboratory , Uw Department Of Astronomy , Cardiff University , European Space Agency Solar Orbiter , University Of Washington , Wale Cardiff University , Ames Research Center , Daily Mail Mailonline , Daily Mail In September , James Clerk Maxwell Telescope , Mauna Kea Observatory , Atacama Large , Daily Mail Astronomer Jane Greaves , Daily Mail The , Victoria Meadows , European Space Agency , Solar Orbiter , Daily Mail The European Space Agency , Jet Propulsion , Soviet Vega , ஜேன் கிரேவ்ஸ் ,

Hopes of finding life on Venus are dashed as study finds atmosphere does NOT contain phosphine gas


Scientists initially claimed to detect phosphine in the planet s clouds
Phosphine is released by microorganisms that don t use oxygen
A new report claims the original study misread data from radio telescopes
It found the initial signal did not come from the planet s clouds
But it came from the upper atmosphere where phosphine would be  destroyed
Sulfur dioxide is one of the most common compound in Venus atmosphere ....

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Life on Venus: Phosphine discovery was false, new research claims | Science | News


By current understandings, phosphine is created through biological processes which suggested, albeit slightly, that there could be some form of microbial life on Venus.
Many started to jump conclusions Venus could be home to some form of simple alien life, especially in the clouds.
However, new research has put the evidence of phosphine in Venus atmosphere into doubt, which would also eradicate any lingering thoughts of life on Earth s nearest planetary neighbour.
Scientists at the University of Washington (UW) created a robust model of the conditions on Venus to revisit the radio telescope observations which led to the initial discovery. ....

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Phosphine on Venus? It's probably just sulfur dioxide


Enthusiasm over a Venusian compound associated with life has been quenched by a new study. It’s probably just sulfur dioxide, researchers now believe.
A 3D perspective view of the surface of Venus. Image credits: NASA/JPL.
Phosphine is a colorless, flammable, toxic gas compound not something you’d be thrilled to see in most cases. But back in September, researchers got
really excited about phosphine because it detected in the atmosphere of Venus.
For all its toxicity, phosphine can be produced by life. Finding phosphine on the hellish Venus suggests that life could perhaps exist on Venus, which understandably made a lot of astronomers very curious. ....

Andrew Lincowski , Uw Department Of Astronomy , Nature Astronomy , Victoria Meadows , Atacama Large , James Clerk Maxwell Telescope , Venus Express , ஊவ் துறை ஆஃப் வானியல் , இயற்கை வானியல் , விக்டோரியா புல்வெளிகள் , ஜேம்ஸ் குமாஸ்தா மேக்ஸ்வெல் தொலைநோக்கி , வெள்ளி எக்ஸ்பிரஸ் ,