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Alien life on Venus may be discovered by new exploration mission

Venus alien life may be detected through new missions to neighboring planets.

Rocket Lab is using electron spacecraft and photon probes to detect possible extraterrestrial life in theatmosphereof Venus. announced that it would launch through the clouds of Venus. 48-60 kilometers from the surface of the world.

The 20-kilogram rover, which launches in 2023, will spend just five minutes in Venus' clouds, but it can still find some amazing discoveries.

"The most important scientific goal is to look for evidence of life or habitability in the clouds of Venus. There are two specific scientific objectives: the presence of organic molecules within cloud layer particles." and to determine the shape and index of refraction (a proxy for composition) of cloud particles,” said Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers Rocket Lab, whosestudyPlease fill in

"This mission is the first opportunity in almost 40 years to directly probe particles in Venus' clouds. , breakthrough science is possible."

Researchers suggest potential ammonia-producing life forms may exist in Venus' clouds. twenty one} . This is "like nothing you've seen before". Hydrogen may indicate chemical reactions that make the planet habitable for alien life.

Venus itself is so hot that it is unlikely to harbor life. Also, if there is life in the clouds, it could be microorganisms like bacteria on Earth. A planet, or even a nearby planet like Mars.

However, other scientists are skeptical of this claim. If there was extraterrestrial life on the planet, it probably left evidence in the atmosphere that it fed and lived, but no such evidence was found on Venus, Cambridge Earth said. The Office of Science suggests.

"We looked at the sulfur-based 'food' available in Venus' atmosphere. It's not something you or I want to eat, but it's the main available source of energy." said Sean Jordan of the Cambridge Institute. of astronomy.

"If the food is being consumed by life, the evidence should be seen in the loss or gain of certain chemicals in the atmosphere."