The planet Venus, as imaged by the Magellan 10 mission. Credit: NASA/JPL |
Welcome back to our series on Colonizing the Solar System! Today,
we take a look at Earth’s “sister planet”, the hellish, yet strangely
similar planet Venus. Enjoy!
Since humans first began looking up at the skies, they have been
aware of Venus. In ancient times, it was known as both the “Morning
Star” and the “Evening Star”, due to its bright appearance in the sky at
sunrise and sunset. Eventually, astronomers realized that it was in
fact a planet, and that like Earth, it too orbited the Sun. And thanks
to the Space Age and numerous missions to the planet, we have learned exactly what kind of environment Venus has.
With an atmosphere so dense that it makes regular surface imaging
impossible, heat so intense it can melt lead, and sulfuric acid rain,
there seems little reason to go there. But as we’ve learned in recent
years, Venus was once a very different place, complete with oceans and continents. And with the right technology, colonies could be built above the clouds, where they would be safe.
So what would it take to colonize Venus? As with other proposals for
colonizing the Solar System, it all comes down to having the right kinds
of methods and technologies, and how much are we willing to spend.
At a closest average distance of 41 million km (25,476,219 mi), Venus is the closest planet to Earth. Credit: NASA/JPL/Magellan |
Examples in Fiction:
Since the early 20th century, the idea of colonizing Venus has been
explored in science fiction, mainly in the form of terraforming it. The
earliest known example is Olaf Stapleton’s Last And First Men (1930),
two chapters of which are dedicated to describing how humanity’s
descendants terraform Venus after Earth becomes uninhabitable; and in
the process, commit genocide against the native aquatic life.
By the 1950s and 60s, terraforming began to appear in many works of
science fiction. Poul Anderson also wrote extensively about terraforming
in the 1950s. In his 1954 novel, The Big Rain, Venus is altered
through planetary engineering techniques over a very long period of
time. The book was so influential that the term term “Big Rain” has
since come to be synonymous with the terraforming of Venus.
In 1991, author G. David Nordley suggested in his short story (“The
Snows of Venus”) that Venus might be spun-up to a day-length of 30 Earth
days by exporting its atmosphere of Venus via mass drivers. Author Kim
Stanley Robinson became famous for his realistic depiction of
terraforming in the Mars Trilogy – which included Red Mars, Green Mars and Blue Mars.
In 2012, he followed this series up with the release of 2312,
a science fiction novel that dealt with the colonization of the entire
Solar System – which includes Venus. The novel also explored the many
ways in which Venus could be terraformed, ranging from global cooling to
carbon sequestration, all of which were based on scholarly studies and
proposals.
Artist’s conception of a terraformed Venus, showing a surface largely covered in oceans. Credit: Wikipedia Commons/Ittiz |
Proposed Methods:
All told, most proposed methods for colonizing Venus emphasize
ecological engineering (aka. terraforming) to make the planet habitable.
However, there have also been suggestions as to how human beings could
live on Venus without altering the environment substantially.
For instance, according to Inner Solar System: Prospective Energy and Material Resources,
by Viorel Badescu, and Kris Zacny (eds), Soviet scientists have
suggested that humans could colonize Venus’ atmosphere rather than
attempting to live on its hostile surface since the 1970s.
More recently, NASA scientist Geoffrey A. Landis wrote a paper titled “Colonization of Venus“, in which he proposed that cities could be built above Venus’ clouds. At an altitude of 50 km above the surface, he claimed, such cities would be safe from the harsh Venusian environment:
“[T]he atmosphere of Venus is the most earthlike environment (other than Earth itself) in the solar system. It is proposed here that in the near term, human exploration of Venus could take place from aerostat vehicles in the atmosphere, and that in the long term, permanent settlements could be made in the form of cities designed to float at about fifty kilometer altitude in the atmosphere of Venus.”
Artist’s concept of a Venus cloud city — a possible future outcome of the High Altitude Venus Operational Concept (HAVOC) plan. Credit: Advanced Concepts Lab/NASA Langley Research Center |
At an altitude of 50 km above the surface, the environment has a
pressure of approximately 100,000 Pa, which is slightly less than
Earth’s at sea level (101,325 Pa). Temperatures in this regions also
range from 0 to 50 °C (273 to 323 K; 32 to 122 °F), and protection
against cosmic radiation would be provided by the atmosphere above, with
a shielding mass equivalent to Earth’s.
The Venusian habitats, according to Landis’ proposal, would initially
consists of aerostats filled with breathable air (a 21:79
oxygen-nitrogen mix). This is based on the concept that air would be a
lifting gas in the dense carbon dioxide atmosphere, possessing over 60%
of the lifting power that helium has on Earth.
These would provide initial living spaces for colonists, and could
act as terraformers, gradually converting Venus’ atmosphere into
something livable so the colonists could migrate to the surface. One way
to do this would be to use these very cities as solar shades, since
their presence in the clouds would prevent solar radiation from reaching
the surface.
This would work particularly well if the floating cities were made of
low-albedo materials. Alternately, reflective balloons and/or
reflecting sheets of carbon nanotubes or graphene could be deployed from
these. This offers the advance of in-situ resource allocation, since
atmospheric reflectors could be built using locally-sourced carbon.
In addition, these colonies could serve as platforms where chemical
elements were introduced into the atmosphere in large amounts. This
could take the form of calcium and magnesium dust (which would sequester
carbon in the form of calcium and magnesium carbonates), or a hydrogen
aerosol (producing graphite and water, the latter of which would fall to
the surface and cover roughly 80% of the surface in oceans).
NASA has begun exploring the possibility of mounting crewed missions to Venus as part of their High Altitude Venus Operational Concept (HAVOC), which was proposed in 2015. As outlined by Dale Arney and Chris Jones from NASA’s Langley Research Center, this mission concept calls for all crewed portions of the missions to be conducted from lighter than air craft or from orbit.
Potential Benefits:
The benefits of colonizing Venus are many. For starters, Venus it the closest planet to Earth,
which means it would take less time and money and send missions there,
compared to other planets in the Solar System. For example, the Venus Express probe took just over five months to travel from Earth to Venus, whereas the Mars Express probe took nearly six months to get from Earth to Mars.
In addition, launch windows to Venus occur more often, every 584 days when Earth and Venus experience an inferior conjunction. This is compared to the 780 days it takes for Earth and Mars to achieve opposition (i.e. the point in their orbits when they make their closest approach).
Compared to a mission to Mars, a mission to Venus’ atmosphere would
also subject astronauts to less in the way of harmful radiation. This is
due in part to Venus’ greater proximity, but also from Venus’ induced
magnetosphere – which comes from the interaction of its thick atmosphere
with solar wind.
Also, for floating settlements established in Venus’ atmosphere,
there would be less risk of explosive decompression, since there would
not be a significant pressure difference between the inside and outside
of the habitats. As such, punctures would pose a lesser risk, and
repairs would be easier to mount.
In addition, humans would not require pressurized suits to venture
outside, as they would on Mars or other planets. Though they would still
need oxygen tanks and protection against the acid rain when working
outside their habitats, work crews would find the environment far more
hospitable.
Venus is also close in size and mass to the Earth, resulting in a surface gravity that would be much easier to adapt to (0.904 g). Compared to gravity on the Moon, Mercury or Mars (0.165 and 0.38 g), this would likely mean that the health effects associated with weightlessness or microgravity would be negligible.
In addition, a settlement there would have access to abundant
materials with which to grow food and manufacture materials. Since
Venus’ atmosphere is made mostly out of carbon dioxide, nitrogen and
sulfur dioxide, these could be sequestered to create fertilizers and
other chemical compounds.
CO² could also be chemically separated to create oxygen gas, and the
resulting carbon could be used to manufacture graphene, carbon nanotubes
and other super-materials. In addition to being used for possible solar
shields, they could also be exported off-world as part of the local
economy.
Challenges:
Naturally, colonizing a planet like Venus also comes with its share
of difficulties. For instance, while floating colonies would be removed
from the extreme heat and pressure of the surface, there would still be
the hazard posed by sulfuric acid rain. So addition to the need for
protective shielding in the colony, work crews and airships would also
need protection.
Second, water is virtually non-existent on Venus, and the composition
of the atmosphere would not allow for synthetic production. As a
result, water would have to be transported to Venus until it be produced
onsite (i.e. bringing in hydrogen gas to create water form the
atmosphere), and extremely strict recycling protocols would need to be
instituted.
Solar shades placed in orbit of Venus are a possible means of terraforming the planet. Credit: IEEE Spectrum/John MacNeill |
And of course, there is the matter of the cost involved. Even with
launch windows occurring more often, and a shorter transit time of about
five months, it would still require a very heavy investment to
transport all the necessary materials – not to mention the robot workers
needed to assemble them – to build even a single floating colony in
Venus’ atmosphere.
Still, if we find ourselves in a position to do so, Venus could very
become the home of “Cloud Cities”, where carbon dioxide gas is processed
and turned into super-materials for export. And these cities could
serve as a base for slowly introducing “The Big Rain” to Venus,
eventually turning into the kind of world that could truly live up to
the name “Earth’s sister planet”.
For more information, check out Terraforming Mars at NASA Quest! and NASA’s Journey to Mars.
And if you liked the video posted above, come check out our Patreon page and find out how you can get these videos early while helping us bring you more great content!
Sources:
-
Geoffrey A. Landis, “Colonization of Venus“, NASA Glenn Research Center
- V. Badescu, K. Zacny (eds.), Inner Solar System: Prospective Energy and Material Resource, Springer.com
- Wikipedia – Colonization of Venus
- M.J. Way et al. “Was Venus the first habitable world of our solar system?“, Geophysical Research Letters.
- D. Arney, C. Jones. “HAVOC: High Altitude Venus Operational Concept – An Exploration Strategy for Venus“, NASA Technical Reports Server, Langley Research Center.
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