HomeNewsWorldLife on Venus: Carl Sagan knew it in 1967, now astronomers see possible hints

Life on Venus: Carl Sagan knew it in 1967, now astronomers see possible hints

As astronomers plan for searches for life on Venus, there may be bizarre microbes living in the sulfuric acid-laden clouds of the hothouse planet.

September 15, 2020 / 12:19 IST
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Late US astronomer Carl Sagan predicted in 1967 that there could be life on Venus. Now, two telescopes in Hawaii and Chile spotted in the thick Venutian clouds the chemical signature of phosphine, a noxious gas that on Earth is only associated with life, according to a study journal Nature Astronomy published on September 14.

Astronomers have found a potential sign of life high in the atmosphere of neighboring Venus: hints there may be bizarre microbes living in the sulfuric acid-laden clouds of the hothouse planet.

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Several outside experts — and the study authors themselves — agreed this is tantalizing but said it is far from the first proof of life on another planet. They said it doesn't satisfy the “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" standard established by Sagan, who speculated about the possibility of life in the clouds of Venus in 1967. Sagan pointed out that a high carbon-dioxide atmosphere was not an obstacle.

"Sagan's work on Venus was formative, though few today remember his impact," Mashable quoted Darby Dyar, the chair of NASA’s Venus Exploration Advisory Group, as saying.