The Venus Life Equation [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2007.00105


Ancient Venus and Earth may have been similar in crucial ways for the development of life, such as liquid water oceans, land-ocean interfaces, the 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 survived the changes that have led an inhospitable surface on Venus today. Today the Venus cloud layer may provide a refugium for extant life. We introduce the Venus Life equation: 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. We evaluate each of these factors using our current understanding of Earth and Venus environmental conditions from the Archean to the present. We find that probability of origination of life on Venus is similar to that of the Earth and argue that the other factors are nonzero, yielding a probability of extant life of Venus of 0.1 or less. The Venus Life Equation identifies poorly understood factors that can be addressed by direct observations with future exploration missions.

Read this paper on arXiv…

N. Izenberg, D. Gentry, D. Smith, et. al.
Thu, 2 Jul 20
6/64

Comments: Submitted to Astrobiology for Venus Special issue. 25 pages, 3 figures. Also to be submitted as white paper in shortened form to Planetary and Astrobiology Decadal Survey