this post was submitted on 28 Nov 2020
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The US didn't win the space race btw.

I've been on a kick reading about old school space exploration and was surprised to find this out. The picture looks comparable to the Mars rover, and had to travel over double the distance to get there.

Knowing what we know now, there could absolutely be new life on places like this, but we'll never know because where's the ~capital~

source!?: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_missions_to_Venus

History of the Venus Landers: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venera

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago)

The Soviets (correctly) considered Venus the best candidate for a first extraterrestrial colony: the surface is very hot but at an altitude of 53 km the temperature is 20°C and the pressure is the same as in high cities of Earth like La Paz and Lhasa. The atmosphere up there is 99% carbon dioxide, which can be used to grow plants to produce food and oxygen and is clear to sunlight, and is denser than breathable air. There are also very fast winds at that altitude that circle the planet every 100 hours.

So you can imagine a floating habitat suspended by its own atmosphere, with a teflon greenhouse for food, solar and nuclear power for electricity, pushed by the wind into a 100-hour day/night cycle. Unlike in Mars, a leak in the habitat would not result in explosive decompression but a slow diffusion of carbon dioxide. Eventually a way to mine the surface for minerals could be developed.

Edit: Like @spectre said, I forgot about the gravity! Another huge problem for space colonies (like temperature, pressure and cosmic ray protection) already solved for us.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 years ago (1 children)

I absolutely love this picture btw (the one on the left). It really sells Venus as an alien hellscape. The sky is the color of piss, because it's made of acid. The ground is an endless plane made of hideous cracked black volcanic dirt. When I look at this picture, I see an environment which is completely hostile to me. I already know how hostile Venus is, so hostile that I could not even set foot on the planet because the atmosphere would crush me. But this picture really makes me feel it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 years ago

I know what you mean but I almost find the familiarity weird... it's like what you said but in combination with the fact that I can still recognize rocks, dirt, little hills, and a sky. It's so alien but it's still a place in a way that the middle of space or inside the sun isn't.