Promising sign of life on Venus might not exist after all”, at NationalGeographic.com.“The argument that they were making was that there’s no way for phosphine to be produced by any known mechanism on Venus that does not involve life, which is a really extraordinary claim to be making,” Drake said. “That’s actually a very exciting, exciting discovery.
Because if it’s true, it could be the first indication that we have found evidence for life beyond Earth.”Venus is incapable of hosting life -- like you and me-- as we know it.
The surface temperatures are about 900 degrees Fahrenheit. The clouds are primarily made of sulfuric acid. It’s no place humans will ever set foot.But scientists have speculated that the Venusian clouds could possibly.