Nasa: Venus could have once been habitable
Ancient Venus may have been habitable, according to a new Nasa study that suggests that the planet had a shallow liquid-water ocean and cooler surface temperatures for up to two billion years of its e

Ancient Venus may have been habitable, according to a new Nasa study that suggests that the planet had a shallow liquid-water ocean and cooler surface temperatures for up to two billion years of its early history.
The findings were obtained with a computer model of the planet’s ancient climate, similar to the type used to predict future climate change on Earth.
“These results show ancient Venus may have been a very different place than it is today,” said Michael Way, a researcher at Nasa’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York.
Venus today has a carbon dioxide atmosphere 90 times as thick as Earth’s. There is almost no water vapour. Temperatures reach 462 degrees Celsius at its surface, researchers said.
Scientists long have theorised that Venus formed out of ingredients similar to Earth’s, but followed a different evolutionary path. Measurements by Nasa’s Pioneer mission to Venus in the 1980s first suggested Venus originally may have had an ocean.
However, since Venus is closer to the Sun than Earth and receives far more sunlight, the planet’s ocean evaporated, water-vapour molecules were broken apart by ultraviolet radiation, and hydrogen escaped to space.
With no water left on the surface, carbon dioxide built up in the atmosphere, leading to a so-called runaway greenhouse effect that created present conditions. Until recently, it was assumed that a thick atmosphere like that of modern Venus was required for the planet to have today’s slow rotation rate.
However, newer research has shown that a thin atmosphere like that of modern Earth could have produced the same result. That means an ancient Venus with an Earth-like atmosphere could have had the same rotation rate it has today. The GISS team postulated ancient Venus had more dry land overall than Earth.
