Venus is the second planet from the sun. Its rocky surface reaches temperatures nearly 900°F! That’s too hot for any living thing on Earth. For that reason, Venus has always seemed like an unlikely place for life.
But in 2020, scientists made an exciting discovery. Researchers used powerful telescopes to look at Venus’s atmosphere. They found a chemical called phosphine surrounding the planet. On Earth, phosphine is made only by microbes.
Could tiny alien microbes have made the phosphine in Venus’s clouds? The clouds are 86° to 158°F. That’s cool enough for life to exist. “If there is life there, it’s hard to imagine what it might be like,” says Clara Sousa-Silva. She’s a scientist who helped make the discovery. She works at Harvard University in Massachusetts.
Other research groups tried to find phosphine in Venus’s atmosphere. Some could find the chemical in Venus’s clouds, but others could not. Now, Sousa-Silva and her team are looking for phosphine again to make sure their findings are correct. “This is exactly how science works,” says Sousa-Silva.