homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Venus may still be volcanically active

"If Venus is indeed active today, it would make a great place to visit," said researchers,

Tibi Puiu
December 24, 2020 @ 9:34 pm

share Share

Scientists have known for some time that the surface of Venus is dotted with volcanic features. However, due to the planet’s hazy atmosphere, it has always been uncertain whether Venus is still volcanically active — until now.

New compelling evidence suggests that Venus is volcanically active. This would make it only the second such planet that we know of, besides Earth.

Idunn Mons, a volcanic peak in the Imdr Regio area of Venus. The colored overlay shows heat patterns derived from data recorded by the European Space Agency’s Venus Express spacecraft. Credit: NASA.

In the early 1990s, NASA’s Magellan spacecraft beamed back radar images showing extensive lave flows. Subsequent studies and missions, such as ESA’s Venus Express orbiter, measured infrared light released by the planet’s surface at night to determine the age of the lava flows. Although the data was good enough for scientists to carry relative measurements between older and newer lava flows, their age couldn’t be accurately assessed.

Some have speculated from the data that Venus may have been volcanically active as recent as 2.5 million years ago — which is the blink of an eye in geologic time. But new evidence presented in a study led by Dr. Justin Filiberto, a researcher at the Lunar Planetary Institute in Houston, Texas, may mean that Venus may be volcanically active even now.

Researchers simulated Venus’ very dense atmosphere in the lab to assess its influence on lava flows over time. To their surprise, they found that olivine, a mineral that is abundant in some basaltic rocks (covering 90% of Venus), reacts rapidly with chemicals in Venus’ atmosphere, becoming coated with magnetite and hematite, both iron oxide minerals, within days.

The researchers also found that near-infrared light emitted by these minerals would disappear within days, something consistent with data recorded by the Venus Express mission.

“Our results indicate that lava flows lacking VNIR features due to hematite are no more than several years old. Therefore, Venus is volcanically active now,” the authors of the new study wrote in the journal Science Advances.

Maat Mons, a 5-mile-high volcano on Venus with lava flows. Credit: NASA/JPL.

Now, all that remains is for a new mission to confirm this hypothesis. Besides Earth, the only other confirmed volcanically active worlds that we know of are Io, a moon of Jupiter; Triton, a moon of Neptune; and Enceladus, a moon of Saturn.

However, Mars, Pluto, Jupiter’s moon Europa could also be volcanically active.

“If Venus is indeed active today, it would make a great place to visit to better understand the interiors of planets. For example, we could study how planets cool and why the Earth and Venus have active volcanism, but Mars does not,” Filiberto said.

The next missions bound for Venus are India’s Shukrayaan-1 orbiter and Russia’s Venera-D spacecraft, scheduled to launch by 2023 and 2026, respectively.

share Share

New Liquid Uranium Rocket Could Halve Trip to Mars

Liquid uranium rockets could make the Red Planet a six-month commute.

Scientists think they found evidence of a hidden planet beyond Neptune and they are calling it Planet Y

A planet more massive than Mercury could be lurking beyond the orbit of Pluto.

People Who Keep Score in Relationships Are More Likely to End Up Unhappy

A 13-year study shows that keeping score in love quietly chips away at happiness.

NASA invented wheels that never get punctured — and you can now buy them

Would you use this type of tire?

Does My Red Look Like Your Red? The Age-Old Question Just Got A Scientific Answer and It Changes How We Think About Color

Scientists found that our brains process colors in surprisingly similar ways.

Why Blue Eyes Aren’t Really Blue: The Surprising Reason Blue Eyes Are Actually an Optical Illusion

What if the piercing blue of someone’s eyes isn’t color at all, but a trick of light?

Meet the Bumpy Snailfish: An Adorable, Newly Discovered Deep Sea Species That Looks Like It Is Smiling

Bumpy, dark, and sleek—three newly described snailfish species reveal a world still unknown.

Scientists Just Found Arctic Algae That Can Move in Ice at –15°C

The algae at the bottom of the world are alive, mobile, and rewriting biology’s rulebook.

A 2,300-Year-Old Helmet from the Punic Wars Pulled From the Sea Tells the Story of the Battle That Made Rome an Empire

An underwater discovery sheds light on the bloody end of the First Punic War.

Scientists Hacked the Glue Gun Design to Print Bone Scaffolds Directly into Broken Legs (And It Works)

Researchers designed a printer to extrude special bone grafts directly into fractures during surgery.