One of the hard facts of our 
solar system is that even with eight perfectly nice planets, Earth 
remains the only house on the block with its lights on—at least in terms
 of life. Mars, it’s increasingly clear, was once a warm, watery planet 
and had a shot at cooking up biology, but only until numerous 
environmental cataclysms turned it dry and cold.
Now, according to environmental models run by NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) and reported in Geophysical Research Letters,
 Venus coulda’ been a contender too. For up to two billion years, the 
investigators believe, our cosmic neighbor may have been an entirely 
hospitable place for life.
If Venus was indeed once habitable, you wouldn’t know
 to look at it today. Its surface temperatures climbs as high as 864º F 
(462º C) and its atmosphere—almost entirely carbon dioxide—is 90 times 
thicker than ours, leading to a runaway greenhouse effect. Yet Earth and
 Venus formed out of the same primordial cloud, are almost the exact 
same size and are located in at least a similar proximity to the sun. If
 we have liquid water it’s highly likely Venus once did too—a fact 
confirmed by American space probes which found chemical signatures of 
water in the Venusian atmosphere.
What’s more, Venus’s surface also features elevated 
land masses and comparatively shallow ocean basins like Earth does, 
meaning that water on the surface would have had places to pool. But 
Venus has problems too.
For starters, its greater proximity to the sun means 
it receives 40% more heat and light than Earth does. At first, that 
wasn’t a problem since the sun was 30% dimmer in the early days of the 
solar system, but its brightness—and heat—increased over time.
Worse, Venus’s rotation is exceedingly slow; a single
 Venusian day takes about 117 Earth days. Such a slow day-night cycle 
means a sort of permanent rotisserie spin, with the fires of the 
close-in sun broiling the planet slowly on all sides. Earth’s much 
speedier rotation never lets any one part of the planet get heated for 
too long.
For a long time, investigators blamed the slow spin 
on the thick atmosphere, with solar gravity pulling on the heavy air and
 producing a kind of tidal braking. But if that’s the reason Venus 
rotates so slowly it means the planet has always had that dense 
atmosphere; and if it’s always had that dense atmosphere, it’s always 
been too hot for life. This is where the new theory begins to depart 
from the old ones.
Using computer simulations similar to the ones 
environmental scientists use to study global warming on Earth, the 
Goddard researchers fed in alternate models of an early Venus with a 
thinner, Earth-like atmosphere and a slow rotation caused by other 
factors, including solar gravity locking on the planet’s land mass, not 
its atmosphere. That would have meant a cooler Venus at least at first.
“In the GISS model’s simulation, Venus’s slow
 spin exposes its dayside to the sun for almost two months at a time,” 
said Anthony Del Genio, a co-author of the paper, in a statement that 
accompanied its release. “This warms the surface and produces rain that 
creates a thick layer of clouds, which acts like an umbrella to shield 
the surface from much of the solar heating.”
But the good times couldn’t last. As the sun 
brightened, the Venusian greenhouse began to heat up, with the water on 
the surface evaporating into the atmosphere and from there breaking up 
into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen sputtered into space, never to be
 seen again. Making things worse, if Venus ever had plate tectonics, the
 process would have begun grinding to a halt, due at least in part to 
the lack of water to keep the upper mantle viscous. Without tectonics, 
carbon in the atmosphere can’t be recirculated underground, worsening 
greenhouse conditions.
If there is any good news to come out of the 
Venusian apocalypse, it’s that the balmy conditions may have existed at 
all and if they did, lasted so long. Two billion years is more than 
twice as much time as it took for biology to emerge on Earth. According 
to some theories, as conditions worsened on Venus, microbial life might 
have migrated to the planet’s more temperate cloud tops—similar to the 
way bacteria clinging to microscopic particles are often found in 
Earth’s upper atmosphere.
That’s a biological long-shot, and floating 
microbes are hardly an intelligent civilization. Still, for lonely 
Earthlings longing for cosmic company, even a little bit of nearby 
biology is a promising start.
 

 
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