A new NASA video makes the case that Venus is Earth's "evil twin."
The nefarious moniker is revealed to be, in a way, an apt
description of why astronomers will be investigating Venus this decade.
Scientists and engineers from NASA and the European Space Agency are gearing up
to send three new missions to the second rock from the sun. They want to know a
whole lot more about the nearby planet, which resembles Earth in so many ways,
and yet is so strikingly different.
The video touches on a few nightmarish but intriguing
aspects of Venus. For one, it's got a runaway greenhouse effect. The
15-mile-thick (24 kilometers) shroud of atmosphere is made of carbon dioxide
and contains sulfuric acid clouds. The planet produces temperatures hot enough
to melt lead. Lori Glaze, NASA's director of planetary science, said in the
video that the Venusian surface can reach 900 degrees Fahrenheit (480 degrees
Celsius).
"So it is a crazy place, but really interesting,"
Glaze said. "And we really want to understand why Venus and Earth turned
out so differently."
Venus as seen by Japan's Akatsuki spacecraft. (Image credit:
ISAS, JAXA) |
At least three missions to Venus will fly within the next
decade or so. There is NASA's DAVINCI, short for Deep Atmosphere Venus
Investigation of Noble Gases, Chemistry and Imaging, which includes two major
components. First and foremost is a spacecraft that will fly by Venus,
capturing data about the planet's clouds and its terrain, in addition to acting
as a telecommunications hub for the mission. Second is a special descent probe,
which will drop down through Venus' thick atmosphere and collect data as it
journeys through the perilous environment.
Another mission, called VERITAS, will become the first NASA
orbiter to visit Venus since the 1990s. VERITAS is short for Venus Emissivity,
Radio Science, InSAR, Topography and Spectroscopy. The spacecraft will develop
a big-picture look at Venus and its history, aiding scientists who want to know
more about its volcanoes and to determine whether Venus ever had water. The
Italian Space Agency (ASI), the German Aerospace Center (DLR) and the French
Space Agency (CNES) will also contribute to VERITAS.
Then there is the EnVision mission from the European Space
Agency (ESA). The NASA-supported mission targets a launch in the early 2030s.
When it reaches Venus, EnVision will try to learn why Venus became Earth's
"evil twin," as the NASA video describes it. Specifically, it will
study Venus' hostile atmosphere and its inner core to see how both planets
could form in the same part of the solar system and with the same stuff, yet
yield wildly different realities.
Perhaps soon, these missions will let us marvel at Earth's
closest planetary neighbor.