Amino Acids Stable in Venus' Acidic Clouds, Study Finds
MIT researchers' discovery challenges assumptions about Venus' habitability, suggesting its clouds could support life.
- A new study reveals that 19 essential amino acids can remain stable in sulfuric acid concentrations similar to those found in Venus' clouds, challenging previous assumptions about the planet's habitability.
- The discovery suggests that Venus' cloud layer could potentially support complex chemicals necessary for life, despite its highly acidic environment.
- The research, led by MIT scientists, is part of ongoing efforts to explore the possibility of life in the solar system beyond Earth, with Venus as a key focus.
- Several missions to Venus are planned, including a privately funded mission set to launch in January 2025, aimed at analyzing the planet's cloud chemistry for signs of organic molecules.
- The findings add to a growing body of evidence that life, if it exists on Venus, would have to adapt to extreme conditions, but may not be as far-fetched as previously thought.