London:
Researchers have found evidence of life in the clouds of the planet Venus. Scientists say that after the evidence of the life of bacteria in the clouds of Venus has come to light, there is a possibility that it could be made a more habitable place. But life can thrive in an acidic environment, but nothing is as acidic as the clouds of Venus.
A joint study by Cardiff University, MIT and Cambridge University found that the planet’s clouds, located at a distance of 47.3 million kilometers from Earth, contained nitrogen and hydrogen-containing colorless gas, which Known as ammonia, may be.
Scientists on a set showed the chemical process of how the chemical reaction would neutralize the drops of sulfuric acid around the planet if ammonia was present on the planet Venus. Will come on Although this is still a very acidic condition on the pH scale, it will be the level at which life is likely to survive.
“We know that life on Earth can grow in an acidic environment, but nothing is as acidic as the clouds of Venus,” said Dr. William Bens, co-author of the study from Cardiff University’s School of Physics and Astronomy. “But if something is making ammonia in the clouds, they will neutralize some of the droplets and make them potentially more life-giving,” he added.
Astronomers and scientists have been studying ammonia in the upper atmosphere since the 1970s. Especially since it has always been thought that the planet is so hot that life will not be able to survive there. Now it is being speculated that there may be bacteria-like organisms in the clouds. Scientists believe that the basis of ammonia is biological, not natural factors such as lightning or volcanic eruptions.
Professor Sarah Seiger, co-author of the MIT study, said that ammonia should not be present on the planet Venus. Any gas that is not compatible with the environment around it is automatically suspected to have been created by life.