4.4 Article

The Venus Life Equation

Journal

ASTROBIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 10, Pages 1305-1315

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ast.2020.2326

Keywords

Venus; Astrobiology; Clouds; Habitability; Extremophiles; Evolution

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Ancient Venus and Earth may have had similar conditions necessary for the development of life, with the possibility that life originated on Venus and has survived through time. The Venus Life Equation introduces a new method for calculating the probability of life on Venus, highlighting areas for future exploration missions to address.
Ancient Venus and Earth may have been similar in crucial ways for the development of life, such as liquid water oceans, land-ocean interfaces, favorable chemical ingredients, and energy pathways. If life ever developed on, or was transported to, early Venus from elsewhere, it might have thrived, expanded, and then survived the changes that have led to an inhospitable surface on Venus today. The Venus cloud layer may provide a refugium for extant life that persisted from an earlier more habitable surface environment. We introduce the Venus Life Equation (VLE)-a theory and evidence-based approach to calculate the probability of extant life on Venus, L, using three primary factors of life: Origination, Robustness, and Continuity, or L = O center dot R center dot C. We evaluate each of these factors using our current understanding of Earth and Venus environmental conditions from the Archaean to the present. We find that the probability of origination of life on Venus would be similar to that of Earth, and argue that the other factors should be nonzero, comparable with other promising astrobiological targets in the solar system. The VLE also identifies poorly understood aspects of Venus that can be addressed by direct observations with future exploration missions.

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