A Fleet of robot spaceships to descend Venus in a few years and began exploring the most inhospitable worlds in the solar system. One spacecraft will crash through the planet’s extremely dense – and very hot – atmosphere while the other two orbit above thick acid clouds that cover each other. Venus and use the state-of-the-art radar telescope to observe the terrain below.
Such an investigation is a tremendous renewal of interest in Earth’s closest neighbour. For more than a decade, the American and European space agencies have been neglecting the planet – only for three new Venus missions to be announced in the first few days of June.
Håkan Svedhem, former project manager for previous European planetary exploration, Venus Expressscience journal word nature last week: “Venus is a planet forgotten for too long.”
The goals of the new missions – NASA’s Veritas and Davinci + probes and Europe’s EnVision satellites – are simple. They want to know why Earth’s twin planet is so fundamentally different from our own world.
As astronomers knew at the start of the “space age” in the 1960s, the two planets were the same size and had the same age, composition, and orbit around the sun. Beneath the thick clouds of Venus there is a suspicious ocean or forest. So, in the 1970s and 1980s, a number of robotic probes were sent by the American and Soviet space agencies to uncover the truth.
They reveal a world that is a vision of hell. Venus was found to have a surface temperature of 475°C, which is hot enough to melt lead. At the same time, the atmospheric pressure at its surface is 93 bar, which is equivalent to one kilometer under the earth’s oceans. Soviet probes that landed on Venus in the 1970s and 1980s could only transmit data from the planet for a short time – two hours was their best time – before heat and pressure crushed them.
It was also found that Venus was covered in thick clouds of sulfuric acid. In contrast, our own world has oceans of liquid water, clouds and ice sheets and supports countless living things in their seas, on land and in the sky. The differences between the two planets, despite their superficial similarities, are stark.
And the main cause of these very different conditions is explained by the large amount of carbon dioxide that has accumulated on Venus. This has trapped solar radiation and triggered the greenhouse effect out of control, making the effects of the climate crisis that are now disrupting weather patterns and melting Earth’s ice sheet smaller.
How does this accumulation of carbon dioxide occur, scientists ask. Is Earth lucky or Venus just unlucky? Is it normal for orbiting planets like Venus and Earth to develop thick atmospheres of carbon dioxide that trap solar radiation and trigger a runaway greenhouse effect – or is it just a one-off development in Venus’ case?