Signs For a Strange Type of Life on Venus with Dr. Janusz Petkowski

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • On July 17, 2024, The Guardian, reported that two research teams have re-detected phosphine in Venus' atmosphere and tentatively found ammonia, a compound also produced by living microbes on Earth, sparking significant intrigue among scientists. Although no papers have been published yet, the researchers presented their preliminary findings at the National Astronomy Meeting in Hull, U.K.
    Dr. Janusz Petkowski joins John Michael Goodier to discuss The Type of Life That May Call Venus Home....
    Does phosphine on Venus mean … life?
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Комментарии • 186

  • @rev.markcarrier1894
    @rev.markcarrier1894 28 дней назад +85

    What I find most refreshing in John Godier’s interviews is that he lets his guests speak at length. So many interviewers in the msm take over the interview, spending minutes posing their agenda as questions. Here, the guest is the star and one can learn something.

    • @EventHorizonShow
      @EventHorizonShow  28 дней назад +26

      You get it. John does a great job of creating the classroom experience for the listener. - Ross

    • @JohnMichaelGodier
      @JohnMichaelGodier 28 дней назад +16

      Thank you, and yes, it's very intentional. It's a lot like being a student in the lecture hall asking the professor questions and the audience are the other students. We all want to hear the complete answer before moving on to the next question for maximum information.

    • @dannybrown5744
      @dannybrown5744 27 дней назад +4

      I always asked the questions in class, other students wanted to ask but couldn't articulate. ​@@JohnMichaelGodier

    • @dannybrown5744
      @dannybrown5744 27 дней назад +1

      Even if I knew the answers

    • @Jesse-cw5pv
      @Jesse-cw5pv 27 дней назад

      ​@@dannybrown5744lol it's not hard to articulate a question. You were probably the only one that didn't know. Bragging about asking good questions when you were in school is just dumb. Which makes me think you were just struggling to understand basics

  • @js70371
    @js70371 28 дней назад +36

    John Godier and Isaac Arthur have made Thursdays my favorite day of the week 💫🙏

  • @HugeGamma
    @HugeGamma 28 дней назад +103

    what's discouraging is that it's so difficult to make a confirmation of a bio signature from the planet next door-- an interstellar signal will always be contested

    • @EventHorizonShow
      @EventHorizonShow  28 дней назад +48

      That's why they plan on sending a probe.

    • @larrygraham4875
      @larrygraham4875 28 дней назад +6

      Amen​@@EventHorizonShow

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan 28 дней назад +17

      Yes, Venus is about a million times closer than any exoplanet.

    • @RealBelisariusCawl
      @RealBelisariusCawl 28 дней назад +27

      Frustrating, yes (I share your annoyance) but for a good reason.
      A false detection getting big press could set back the public opinion of the endeavour.
      Don’t say “I’m sure” until you’re really sure, and all that.

    • @TheCakeIsNotaVlog
      @TheCakeIsNotaVlog 28 дней назад +9

      Better to report a false negative than have to retract a false positive

  • @jimitheearthling1469
    @jimitheearthling1469 28 дней назад +35

    How does the astronomer keep his pants up? With an asteroid belt.

    • @Jackson09
      @Jackson09 28 дней назад +4

      Love it...anyone who doesn't, is by definition...an a$$hole I think...I could be wrong.

    • @j.r.6142
      @j.r.6142 28 дней назад +6

      ​@@Jackson09you bet Uranus you are...

    • @jimmyzhao2673
      @jimmyzhao2673 28 дней назад +1

      Boo. 🙄

    • @txrwauy
      @txrwauy 21 день назад +2

      uuuuuggghhhhh!!!!!! so bad it was good!

  • @fluffyspunsugar
    @fluffyspunsugar 28 дней назад +25

    Yay! A new Event Horizon episode! And one of my favorite topics, too.

  • @aiphotoguy
    @aiphotoguy 28 дней назад +22

    Venutian cloud dragons letsgoooooooo

    • @mikeo5059
      @mikeo5059 14 дней назад

      I'm king of Venus Dragon IA

  • @jimmyzhao2673
    @jimmyzhao2673 28 дней назад +15

    A life form that has concentrated acid for blood. Hmmm,... This wont end well methinks.

    • @txrwauy
      @txrwauy 21 день назад +1

      Hortas are actually really friendly - just don't smash their eggs.

    • @higgsboson2280
      @higgsboson2280 17 дней назад +1

      😂😂

  • @chrisk1208
    @chrisk1208 28 дней назад +36

    Scientists being scecptic and critical is good. Scientists being dogmatic and refusing to accept data that doesn't fot your paradigm is annoying to say the least.

    • @pantherstealth1645
      @pantherstealth1645 28 дней назад

      And deserving of public flogging! 🤬

    • @Boofi-quat
      @Boofi-quat 28 дней назад

      I have a weird feeling the whole scientific and academic system bouta get Galileo’d and I am all here for it.
      Sick to death of people treating the Scientific Method as some kind of Faith. It is not, never was and never will be. It is supposed to thrive on being consistently and productively *wrong,* it’s not supposed to prop up eternal edifices of theory for technocrats and their direct descendants to live upon hand and foot.
      You could almost call it a priesthood.

    • @peopleseethis
      @peopleseethis 27 дней назад

      For sure, the universe is never wrong, it just is, it's the data and understanding of it that is the problem.

    • @destructionman1
      @destructionman1 26 дней назад

      Dafuq do scecptic or fot mean?

    • @stealth7545
      @stealth7545 21 день назад

      a lot of scientists (archeologists especially) see their work as their career, and if something pokes holes or uproots it they take it as a personal attack

  • @JameyBarrow
    @JameyBarrow 28 дней назад +7

    "Life is extremely fragile chemistry that has found a way to copy itself and continue to exist"
    -Lee Cronin

  • @siz4sean
    @siz4sean 28 дней назад +15

    This is gonna be good!

  • @RavenTD46
    @RavenTD46 28 дней назад +6

    I didn't really "fall in," I just clicked the play button. 😮

    • @rev.markcarrier1894
      @rev.markcarrier1894 28 дней назад +1

      @@RavenTD46 You did fall in! You just did not experience it!

  • @joey104102
    @joey104102 28 дней назад +10

    Woo hooooo🎉
    .. a day with a new JMG video is always a great day 😊

  • @kristopherkerr4128
    @kristopherkerr4128 28 дней назад +6

    Thanks for the video! Excited for this conversation.

  • @armchairgravy8224
    @armchairgravy8224 28 дней назад +8

    Chemistry in a high-energy system like Venus' atmosphere has to be a wee bit weird. I'm not calling life yet.

    • @rolandthethompsongunner64
      @rolandthethompsongunner64 28 дней назад +1

      @@armchairgravy8224 I’m highly skeptical myself.

    • @abrahamroloff8671
      @abrahamroloff8671 28 дней назад +3

      Pressure, in addition to the heat in the system, also drastically affects chemistry. Reactions that were not naturally possible in our atmosphere might be possible on Venus, and some others that do happen here might be impossible there too.

    • @rolandthethompsongunner64
      @rolandthethompsongunner64 28 дней назад +1

      @@abrahamroloff8671 Until it’s proven to exist this is all speculation.

    • @abrahamroloff8671
      @abrahamroloff8671 28 дней назад

      ​​@@rolandthethompsongunner64pressure having the sort of effects I described is not speculation. Chemistry really does behave differently under different pressures. This has been demonstrated in countless lab experiments for many decades.

    • @JohnMichaelGodier
      @JohnMichaelGodier 27 дней назад

      @@rolandthethompsongunner64 No, the detection isn't speculation. It's a detection. Actually two independent ones of the same thing. It's also not speculation that biology can produce phosphene, it's doing it on earth, and ammonia, well change a cat litter box to see that. What is speculation is that it may be due to life at Venus, but that is where you start in looking for something. Could it be weird high pressure chemistry we don't understand? Sure. So go there and find out what it is. That's all that was here.

  • @stricknine6130
    @stricknine6130 26 дней назад +3

    We need to give Venus more attention! Thanks for the episode!

  • @pravanjugath
    @pravanjugath 28 дней назад +5

    My favourite channel. Makes my day :) Thank you JMG !!!

  • @ollywright
    @ollywright 28 дней назад +7

    Very interesting. Perhaps the well knows sci-fi of aliens having concentrated acid for blood is more realistic than we realise.

    • @rolandthethompsongunner64
      @rolandthethompsongunner64 28 дней назад +1

      Sure. At crushing pressures and at 860 degrees. 😂

    • @nathanlewis42
      @nathanlewis42 28 дней назад +4

      @@rolandthethompsongunner64 you didn’t listen to the video. The sulphuric acid is in the clouds which are high up in the atmosphere where the temperatures and pressures are very close to Earth’s.

    • @rolandthethompsongunner64
      @rolandthethompsongunner64 28 дней назад

      @@nathanlewis42 So what’s your point? There’s life in sulphuric acid clouds in Venus’s atmosphere?☝️😂

    • @catpoke9557
      @catpoke9557 28 дней назад +4

      @@rolandthethompsongunner64 Yes... that's exactly their point lol. It has been determined already that it's not theoretically impossible for life to survive in Venus' atmosphere, we just haven't confirmed if it's actually there or not.

    • @nathanlewis42
      @nathanlewis42 27 дней назад

      @@rolandthethompsongunner64 the point is that what you said about 860 degrees and crushing pressures doesn't apply. Life *might* be possible in the clouds.

  • @tomaszj3285
    @tomaszj3285 28 дней назад +7

    Polska gurom!!!

  • @senecaflint6853
    @senecaflint6853 25 дней назад +1

    Great interview overall. Sometimes JMG needs to tone down the excitement at the start. His first question mentioned something along the lines of “why the phosphene can’t be inorganic” to Dr. Petkowski, and the professor spent seemingly the next 20 minutes talking about how open and unsettled the phosphene discussion is

  • @peopleseethis
    @peopleseethis 27 дней назад +3

    Balloon probe mission, when?

  • @groovinhooves
    @groovinhooves 27 дней назад +1

    The wonderful thing about sound scientific method is that we win, we advance whatever we ultimately discover to be the mystery gas source. The important thing is to keep backing the research and platforms needed to further that aim. The more we know, the better we adapt, survive to evolve.

  • @txrwauy
    @txrwauy 21 день назад

    This was another brilliant show. JMG puts the BBC and TV channels to shame with the content he has.

  • @jluke168
    @jluke168 28 дней назад +4

    I got an idea, has anyone tried replicating the conditions at this height in the Venusian atmosphere that life might live, and just shoved a load of promising bacteria into it, and seen if that bacteria can survive, evolve thrive, die out whatever. Like we know the conditions, we have life, why not mix them up in a lab and see what happens?

    • @abrahamroloff8671
      @abrahamroloff8671 28 дней назад +1

      Hard to simulate an atmosphere, for such an experiment, when we aren't even sure what it's all made of. Best case scenario you're getting an inconclusive result, and it's hard to get funding when your best case is *shrug* and a "maybe".

    • @jluke168
      @jluke168 28 дней назад +4

      @@abrahamroloff8671 I thought we were pretty confident on the major constituents of the atmosphere from the satellites and spacecraft that have visited. What level of unkown is there in the composition of the gases at altitudes where the pressure is 1atm? What level of funding do you expect such an experiment to take? I imagine it would be incredibly cheap, that's why I suggested it.

    • @jluke168
      @jluke168 28 дней назад

      @@abrahamroloff8671 Are you just a bot? because yeah like I thought, the gaseous compisiton is well known:
      96% carbon dioxide, 3% nitrogen and 1% other gases. These other gases are mainly sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, water vapor, helium, argon and neon, according to NASA
      That sounds like an incredibly cheap atmosphere to put together and place in a few jars with some bacteria.

  • @MCsCreations
    @MCsCreations 28 дней назад +1

    Fantastic interview, John! Thanks a bunch! 😃
    Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊

  • @amangogna68
    @amangogna68 27 дней назад +1

    Great video and information !

  • @RobinPillage.
    @RobinPillage. 27 дней назад +1

    Great interview

  • @Archnemesis88
    @Archnemesis88 27 дней назад +1

    Excellent discussion!

  • @WaynePDL
    @WaynePDL 28 дней назад +3

    Protomolecule on Venus? 😮

  • @ModernArtisanCasey
    @ModernArtisanCasey 28 дней назад +2

    Gonna have to watch Dr Strangelove now

  • @jpaulc441
    @jpaulc441 27 дней назад +2

    I want Venus to be inhabited by millions of Koffing Pokemon.

  • @BloodyBobJr
    @BloodyBobJr 27 дней назад +1

    I find Venus to be the most exciting prospect for research currently in our solar system. I love Mars and it should be studied in detail..but let's really dig into Venus, it's close and has so many interesting aspects. Along with Io and all those ice moons(but are so far from us).
    I know its wishful and fanciful thinking..but just imagine one probe sitting in the upper or lower atmosphere of Venus actually finds Something. Something unexplainable, different and beyond our current understanding.
    Something that is making gases and isn't just chemistry we don't understand. How mindblowing would it be to find organic anything this close to us..right on our solar door step!

  • @omni_0101
    @omni_0101 28 дней назад +4

    I always wonder if the Soviet Probe seeded life there

    • @harryseldon362
      @harryseldon362 27 дней назад

      Excellent question well worth pondering. However, if that were true there should be some obvious signs we could detect.

    • @NIL0S
      @NIL0S 16 дней назад

      Trillions of microbic comrades!

  • @DavidEvans_dle
    @DavidEvans_dle 27 дней назад +1

    I know it mostly falls into the rhelm of speculation - but do we have any guesses about the tonnage of bio-mass needed to generate replenish the phosphine gas in the Venusian atmosphere?

  • @Mange_the_great
    @Mange_the_great 27 дней назад

    Excellent episode! To me, it is confusing that we aren't attempting to send more probes to Venus. Such an interesting planet.

  • @bernardopaul7861
    @bernardopaul7861 27 дней назад

    I saw an interview with Peter Beck, founder of RocketLab, where he says that Venus is worth the effort because its upper atmosphere is more habitable than the surface of Mars.

  • @JayKay-d5p
    @JayKay-d5p 28 дней назад +4

    Please add descriptive text with each image presented

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan 28 дней назад +1

    This will be tonight's good night program but right now it's time for dinner and Tim Dodd's tour of Blue Origin. Hopefully Jeff can launch a probe to Venus with New Glenn.

    • @EventHorizonShow
      @EventHorizonShow  28 дней назад +3

      Rocket lab.

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan 28 дней назад +3

      @@EventHorizonShow Yes, they have plans but that is a small probe. I want a large probe with an orbiter, lander and a balloon! 🙂

    • @EventHorizonShow
      @EventHorizonShow  28 дней назад +4

      You might get your wish...

  • @scottritomanaksimonscott6213
    @scottritomanaksimonscott6213 28 дней назад

    Can't wait to enjoy my 4 day long suntan sessions on the free floating resorts of Venus

  • @DanielEngsvang
    @DanielEngsvang 18 дней назад

    I also believe that simple life is quite common throughout the Universe, but that the actual "Origin" of the first organism( may vary depending on the local chemistry and so on) on Different planets share the same kind of origin, but it's not "God", and it's Not just a coincidence based on luck and time but something else all together. I personally believe that Consciousness itself is what creates these first organisms, just like how many experiments have shown that a focused human mind(Consciousness) are able to affect the outcome of "Random number generators" to a great degree, and when they are many the effects is even stronger. So before Consciousness was divided into all these myriads of life forms on Earth it may have been able to do things such as piecing together the first primitive life(simplified). It's the most logical explanation that i can come up with right now. 🙂

  • @jluke168
    @jluke168 28 дней назад

    I'd love for this guy and his team to link up with the assembly theory woman, because at the end he's saying, as soon as natural selection started, is the start of life, and that aligns with what she was saying.

  • @MrFleem
    @MrFleem 27 дней назад

    I wonder if the ammonia and/or oxygen might actually be coming off the probes as the atmosphere of Venus reacts with materials on board

  • @LuisAldamiz
    @LuisAldamiz 25 дней назад

    Life finds a way...
    ... or rather chemistry finds a way that happens to be life-like.

  • @ridingvenus
    @ridingvenus 26 дней назад

    I’m ready to go Venus with my venus’s since 2008ish.

  • @dessertstorm7476
    @dessertstorm7476 27 дней назад

    Why is it called phosphine and not phosphane?

  • @DarthLink1986
    @DarthLink1986 28 дней назад

    How badass would life have to be to survive on Venus? Would it have had to evolve very slowly as the Venetian climate changed over time to where it is today?

  • @keithjacobson1640
    @keithjacobson1640 27 дней назад

    I wish we could find definitive proof of at least microbial life like tomorrow. I'm kind of sick of the wait and patience isn't my strength. 😂

  • @BobSmith-vs5jp
    @BobSmith-vs5jp 28 дней назад

    Is it possible that earth probes carried life to Venus & it flourished in the atmosphere?

  • @gregoryM8105
    @gregoryM8105 28 дней назад +6

    Are they Republicans?

    • @larrygraham4875
      @larrygraham4875 28 дней назад +2

      😮😅😊

    • @Zebred2001
      @Zebred2001 28 дней назад

      Well Venus is a boiling Hellscape ... just like anywhere run by jackass blue Democrats!

  • @dytiscusmarginalis8443
    @dytiscusmarginalis8443 26 дней назад

    POLAND STRONK!!! 💪and SMART!!! 🧠

  • @12pentaborane
    @12pentaborane 28 дней назад +1

    I know this makes me unpopular in some circles but I've always thought we'd find life in the clouds of Venus over the surface of Titan. At least ever since I learned about a habitable layer in Venus's clouds.

  • @ryanb9749
    @ryanb9749 28 дней назад

    Whats tthe resolution and sampling rate of the new probe vs the 70s probes?

    • @ryanb9749
      @ryanb9749 28 дней назад

      Is there an orbiter planned?

  • @helixxharpell
    @helixxharpell 25 дней назад

    Once we find e.t. life, how's that gonna protect the human race from extinction level event from a comet or asteroid? Imo, 80% of $ spent on space-related science should be spent on keeping us all alive!
    There needs to be a HUGE effort by all the countries who can afford it to develop technology to save us.

  • @dee_w784
    @dee_w784 28 дней назад

    Maybe I missed something but what language does 'thleekith' come from?

    • @EventHorizonShow
      @EventHorizonShow  28 дней назад +5

      Well you see we have a quantum mechanical possum.

  • @davidlane2069
    @davidlane2069 21 день назад

    I take it you've never heard/taken seriously Emmanuel Velekofsky. Well join Carl Sagan I suppose. But EV predicted many things about Venus years before we found out, ie climate,heat, surface characteristics and many more. Also how many ancient civilizations who kept impeccable star charts except seemingly the position of Venus. Just saying 😉

  • @desperatelyseekingrealnews
    @desperatelyseekingrealnews 27 дней назад

    Ammonia.= Nappies = life .

  • @rolandthethompsongunner64
    @rolandthethompsongunner64 28 дней назад

    Shouldn’t the question be how does Venus maintain any atmosphere without a magnetic field?

    • @EventHorizonShow
      @EventHorizonShow  28 дней назад +3

      Answered: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.1217013

    • @rolandthethompsongunner64
      @rolandthethompsongunner64 28 дней назад +1

      @@EventHorizonShow Very interesting. Guess another question is could Venus of originally been a hot Neptune type planet and gradually evolved to what it is now ? Still quite a mystery how it’s maintained any atmosphere without obvious vulcanism. There were theories it might still be active but those seem to have been disproven.

    • @catpoke9557
      @catpoke9557 28 дней назад +1

      @@rolandthethompsongunner64 No, Venus has recently been found to almost certainly have active volcanism. I'm talking very recent, like in 2023 I think.
      It's also believed Venus used to be a pretty earth-like planet, not a hot neptune. It's believed Venus used to have Earth-like temperatures with rain, snow, oceans, maybe even life. Basically just a secondary Earth in the solar system. Buuut then global warming happened and it happened a lot worse than it has on our planet. So I guess we should be glad our planet is extremely resilient- it could've ended in the great dying, when Earth experienced an event similar to what got Venus to where it is today.

    • @williamarmstrong4487
      @williamarmstrong4487 27 дней назад +2

      @@rolandthethompsongunner64 Venus active volcanism was "confirmed" in the last 2 years. Not disproven. The evidence for it has been strong since the 70s, but getting actual images of it in the act with enough resolution was difficult. the problem was overcome recently and we have observed eruptions on Venus

  • @aiurea1
    @aiurea1 27 дней назад

    4 years and we find out about it only now? What discoveries are now that we will fimd about much latter? A bit.....

  • @TrueTydin
    @TrueTydin 28 дней назад +2

    Sorry that accent has me hearing “foreskin” constantly and I’m giggling at my work desk like a school boy 😂

    • @eslle7481
      @eslle7481 28 дней назад +1

      What word did he say like that? I didn't catch it and I'm polish like him 😅

    • @AndrewBlucher
      @AndrewBlucher 28 дней назад +1

      It takes all kinds.

    • @pewneosoby2108
      @pewneosoby2108 28 дней назад

      @@eslle7481 "phosphene" I guess.

    • @eslle7481
      @eslle7481 27 дней назад +1

      @@pewneosoby2108 What? It sounds nothing like foreskin imo

    • @pewneosoby2108
      @pewneosoby2108 26 дней назад

      @@eslle7481 i said "I guess", not "thats certainly this particular Word" ;)

  • @JamesBarry-j7m
    @JamesBarry-j7m 28 дней назад

    Its not from a life form but frome rocks breaking down on the surface

    • @JohnMichaelGodier
      @JohnMichaelGodier 28 дней назад +2

      What type of rock, and what mechanism to get them into that general area of the atmosphere?

    • @seditt5146
      @seditt5146 28 дней назад

      @@JohnMichaelGodier Personally I am leaning towards Volcanism and have been from day 1 however at the time they believed there was none. That seems to be shifting though, and I suspect we will find it relatively common on the surface. The temperatures/pressures we are looking at combined with the sulfuric acid along with its breakdown products and most all phosphorus compounds or the element itself will lend itself to phosphine creation.

  • @a-nus
    @a-nus 28 дней назад +1

    uranus is a gas giant 😳

  • @The-House-Of-Kastrioti
    @The-House-Of-Kastrioti 28 дней назад +3

    Now we know where Elon Musk is from.

    • @rossmcleod7983
      @rossmcleod7983 28 дней назад +2

      Under a rock…

    • @friedrichjunzt
      @friedrichjunzt 28 дней назад +1

      Planet Greedy Weirdo?

    • @AllTheGoodNamesGoneReally
      @AllTheGoodNamesGoneReally 28 дней назад

      @@The-House-Of-Kastrioti Don't insult Venus. This special species of moron is homemade.

    • @FoxyCAMTV
      @FoxyCAMTV 28 дней назад +2

      I love Elon Musk,he made Twitter bearable.

    • @man_at_the_end_of_time
      @man_at_the_end_of_time 28 дней назад

      ​​@@The-House-Of-Kastrioti My take on Elon is that he is a member of one of the deeper leading factions driving us to our planned future. That said all these factions haven't allowed for what is really coming even as they struggle ggle amongst themselves.

  • @LeMatt87n
    @LeMatt87n 28 дней назад

    This man is sufficiently smarter than I am

  • @Kustan112
    @Kustan112 28 дней назад

    I AM THE 666TH LIKE!
    (Said in Cthulu mind whisper)

  • @CatboyRocketry
    @CatboyRocketry 26 дней назад

    The same person and his group keeps making these findings and no one else who does follow up concurs with them.

  • @Nookdashiddole
    @Nookdashiddole 27 дней назад +1

    Zzzzzzzzzzzzzz

  • @ParadoxalDream
    @ParadoxalDream 28 дней назад +2

    I am Ra.

    • @Jackson09
      @Jackson09 28 дней назад

      Profound....I am not Ra

    • @roronoazoro7453
      @roronoazoro7453 28 дней назад

      Lancer?

    • @seditt5146
      @seditt5146 28 дней назад

      Thats awesome, I'm schizophrenic also OP. Lets be delusional together!

    • @ParadoxalDream
      @ParadoxalDream 18 дней назад

      @@seditt5146 I'm not schizophrenic but you have all my sympathy if you are. I've worked in mental health care, I know how horrible the condition can be.
      My comment was a light-hearted reference to The Law of One - The Ra Material, which involves "a sixth-density social memory complex that formed on Venus about 2.6 billion years ago".

  • @CooganBear
    @CooganBear 28 дней назад

    There is no life on Venus. 🤣

    • @seditt5146
      @seditt5146 28 дней назад +1

      We have cyclic and varied chemistry, Abundant energy source and a huge reaction chamber with super critical CO2 for solvation and carbon source. The odds of there not being life are so small its unreal but people like yourself couldnt picture it on the bottom of the ocean, in nuclear reactors, in the artic or kilometers deep into the Earth crust. Basically, your camp has been wrong every...single....time! And will likely again be wrong.

    • @LaikaLycanthrope
      @LaikaLycanthrope 27 дней назад

      @@seditt5146 He probably thinks "life" is exclusively technological and humanoid, and nothing else matters

  • @soupstheman143
    @soupstheman143 27 дней назад

    I for one looking forward to what types of Extraterrestrial meats we can begin harvesting and consuming.
    Subterranean Martian Steaks will sell like HOTCAKES amongst the elite. I need a piece of that pie.

  • @timlaughman7074
    @timlaughman7074 13 дней назад

    Get some make sure you comment

  • @glorymanheretosleep
    @glorymanheretosleep 28 дней назад +1

    The idea that there might be bacterial life on Venus is extremely exciting! It might mean that in nearly all sol systems there is a planet with simple life AND complex life.

    • @rolandthethompsongunner64
      @rolandthethompsongunner64 28 дней назад +2

      @@glorymanheretosleep Except we haven’t even discovered a single planet around any G type stars. Which is incredibly depressing.

    • @catpoke9557
      @catpoke9557 28 дней назад

      For me the exciting thing is it would pretty much confirm what I believe: life is common in the universe. If life is not only found on two planets in our solar system, but one planet is INCREDIBLY hard to survive on, it would basically just be showing us that the odds of life occurring in any system with a stable star aren't just THERE but are quite GOOD.
      I seriously believe people underestimate how common life is, because it's just a series of chemical reactions so any planet which has the right composition for those reactions for the right amount of time WILL have life on it until some extinction event wipes it all out. It's as inevitable as any other chemical reaction. Combine bleach and ammonia and you get a noxious gas- that doesn't randomly change for no reason. The reaction stops when some other chemical cancels it out, or the reaction is finished. Same logic should apply to life, but for some reason, people seem to think planets capable of forming life can just... randomly not form it. Which makes no sense.

    • @glorymanheretosleep
      @glorymanheretosleep 27 дней назад

      @@rolandthethompsongunner64 We haven't discovered any single planet around a G type star as those type of stars are incredibly BIG. Our methods are not advanced enough to find a planet there. One day that might change.