These Images Explain Why Venera Went Silent on Venus | 4K
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- Опубліковано 26 вер 2024
- The only images of Venus to be captured from it's surface are here. A huge thanks to our Patreons, it not too late to become one of the first 1000 Astrumnauts. Sign-up on Patreon - bit.ly/4aiJZNF
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References:
Patzold, M.; Hausler, B.; Bird, M.K.; Tellmann, S.; Mattei, R.; Asmar, S. W.; Dehant, V.; Eidel, W.; et al. (2007). "The structure of Venus' middle atmosphere and ionosphere". Nature. 450 (7170): 657-660 - go.nature.com/...
Drossart, P.; Piccioni, G.; Gerard, G.C.; Lopez-Valverde, M. A.; Sanchez-Lavega, A.; Zasova, L.; Hueso, R.; Taylor, F. W.; et al. (2007). "A dynamic upper atmosphere of Venus as revealed by VIRTIS on Venus Express". Nature. 450 (7170): 641-645 - bit.ly/4ecafeU
Credits:
Writer(s): Jon McColgan/ Ross McDonald
Editor/Animator: Nick Shishkin
Narrator: Alex McColgan
Producer(s): Alex McColgan/ Raquel Taylor
Thumbnail Design: Peter Sheppard
#astrum #astronomy #Space #venus #solarsystem #planets
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Alex -Read up on Burt Rutan's Engineers take on 'Climate Change'.
Easily found searching Google. The 100 page PDF and the interview.
Then post a correction video.
Ph.D's must be easy to get these days.
I don't see it as a beautiful thing... I see it as a sad thing... Like the planet is in agonizing pain and continuously bleeding ferociously, by squashed, suffocated and burnt by it's own self... The planet is trying to reform but keeps cracking and bleeding over again... It's just really sad...
Yes i know is the biased knowledge of the possibility that it could've been once just like our earth is what is causing me to feel that way, but mars is slso given that speculation too and it doesn't seem to be in pain like venus, mars is a cold and dead corpse in comparison, saved from the torture venus is facing...
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe... Attack ships on fire off (the) back of Uranus... I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain... Time to die.
that red arrow at the start, pointing to Venus was great,
helpfull thankyou 🙂 x
BOTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
I don't believe it's possible to ever get over the fact that we have pictures of the surfaces of other planets. That is insane. You're looking at the surface of another bloody world. That's that stuff of myth and legend made real. Absolutely incredible.
I couldn't agree more, it's pretty awe-inspiring 😮
The picture of Earth taken by the Mars rover blows my mind every time I see it and really think about what I’m seeing
Ok
Why are you stupid?
It’s called computer generated model based on what data were gathered. Not real the real stuff.
Building, sending AND landing a probe on Venus with 1960/70s tech was an engineering and mathematical milestone.
And then it melts.
@@krux02my good sir, it is 300 degrees, and nearly 20 bar of pressure, what do you expect
@@krux02 It lasted far longer than it was expected to. Good luck engineering an indestructible probe for 75-100 times the atmospheric pressure of Earth and 450 degrees Celsius temperature
@@slavicemperor8279 do you not think it's possible at all?
@@Messier42-handle
300°C and 20 bar are a great understatement. It's more like 450°C and 90 bar.
I still maintain that landing on the surface of Venus and sending images back to Earth is the single most impressive achievement of space science.
Indeed! And I’d love to see modern pictures of the surface.
Soviet tech was no joke at the time!
That landing has captured my imagination since I was in elementary school.
Maybe for the Soviet’s but it doesn’t even touch what was done on Titan with Huygens
Agreed 👍💯
When I first saw those eerie yellow Venera images as a kid, I became captivated by Venus. Sometimes it is weird to think about these exotic, faraway places actually existing, without any humans to witness them, until suddenly you see an image of an actual rock and there it is. The fact that we have these images at all - including that spectacular global radar map from Magellan - is an amazing testament to human ingenuity.
I felt that way the first time I looked through a telescope at Jupiter. All through the history of the solar system, let alone my lifetime, this big ball has just been out there floating, no one around, just silent. That just always stuck with me
@@rhouser1280 Funny... I was going to say almost the exact same thing about Saturn!
It's really there and it really has rings!
When Magellan tried to circumnavigate the world he fell off the edge and landed on Venus, luckily he found a camera there and mailed us some pictures
It’s so cool
And yet it's only 138 light seconds from Earth...
Venus has that Breaking Bad Mexico filter.
Venus vs Mexico
Hot?
Venus ✅
Mexico ✅
Inhospitality?
Venus ✅
Mexico ✅
Sunny?
Venus ✅
Mexico ✅
Deserts?
Venus ✅
Mexico ✅
Rain?*
Venus ❌
Mexico ❌
Life?
Venus ❌
Mexico ❌
Venus: 4/6
Mexico: 4/6
Verdict: Draw!
*liquid water rain because venus does have rain just not water, mexico just doesnt have liquid at all.
Yeah terrain amd cloud coverage affects atmospheric hues. The filters aren't racist or zenophobic or whatever tf reddit calls them. Look at most of Mexico on Google earth or street view... pretty fkin yellow. Parts of Africa and Australia give off reds, Russia and northern Europe can appear gray, Ireland and New zeland... you get it
But where is Don Eladios Pool?
@@whiteuncleruckus it is its own country. Don Eladio got bored so he proclaimed his pool a sovereign nation
@@couchdoggo Hotel? Trivago
For anyone interested, 100 m/s winds is 360 Kph, or 223.7 Mph.
Thank you! I went as far as 6,000 M per minute. That rivals the wind speed on Neptune! A good day to fly a kite, every day!
Just a nice breeze to go along with it's 860 degree afternoons.
@@mattyice2099 Yeah, but it's a dry heat, so... :)
Skin and bones go bye bye.
basically LMP1 speeds down the Mulsanne.
When I was a kid (1960ish), my parents bought a set of books about various science topics, including one about the planets. In that book, they speculated that Venus was probably a lush, green, tropical paradise. They also mentioned the canals of Mars. This same set of books also covered dinosaurs, where they discussed the Brontosaurus, saying that its brain was so tiny that it barely knew it was alive. Oh boy, the things we didn't know back then! Very interesting video, Astrum.
I have a 1950's book about space from my grandfather and it says the same thing. Lush tropical rainforests
I was born in 1980 and I remember some of those things still being bandied about in my very younger years. I also remember a 1986 or 1987 Nova program on PBS called Close Up On the Planets (You can still find it on UA-cam today) that aired basically live as the Voyager probe passed the outer planets. I didn't realize this as a kid but I was basically learning at the same time everybody else was what the outer planets were really like.
I always wanted to be an astronaut. But there were always these dreams that people lived on Mars and Venus because we didn't know for sure what were on those planets, and the textbooks said dinosaurs could still exist somewhere on Earth or deep inside hollow Earth, and that Neanderthals and cavemen were stupid. It's amazing how different everything has turned out in the last 40 years.
Before the Venera probe we had absolutely no idea.
There was a theory it was covered in swamps containing dinosaurs.
in the 1800's everyone wanted it to be a jungle planet. by the 1900's people mostly knew better but still had fond hopes.
@@tsm688 Honestly, I feel that if it didn't have a very slow retro grade rotation. And actually had a moon. It might of had actually contained life.
@@GANTZ100pts It is lacking something else very important -- magnetic field. Especially since it's closer to the sun that's essential. Lacking that, the solar wind eroded all the water away.
@@tsm688 Yep, true that. It probably had one at one point. But most likely, it lost it due to its very slow rotation.
@@tsm688 Heinlein was writing about Venus being habitable at the poles, with native amphibian creatures, in the 1940's or 50's I think. The stories were half science fiction, and half commentary on colonial power.
When the very calm before the storm is sulfuric acid...
😂
I thought the sulphuric acid may have damaged the parachutes of those probes. I think many of them had 'hard landings'. Basically they crashed into Venus at terminal velocity. Not good.
...you make your probe out of materials that aren't corroded by sulfuric acid. It's not nearly as complicated as people make it seem.
@@legitimatehuman1220then why don’t you do it if you think it’s so easy
@@legitimatehuman1220in theory, no it’s not complicated to tackle each problem aspect one at a time. In theory to explore the bottom of the ocean you need to account for freezing temperatures, vaporizing temperatures, as well as the incredibly high pressure of being that deep under water. When you factor in multiple facets it doesn’t become so simple. An answer to 1 problem may very well hinder solving another. Venus has extremely high winds, differences in both atmosphere and pressure, scorching temperatures, as well as an atmosphere rife with sulphuric acid.
“Yeah just make a hull and interior that accommodates all those aspects. So easy.” :D is essentially what you’re saying.
15 trips to Venus in 7 years is wild. So many space missions in that era. We've had some great ones in recent years for sure. Cassini, Rovers etc, but wow did they have so many so frequently back then
Things was a lot cheaper back then. Nowadays a single mission just to normal orbit cost billions
The answer is - not cheaper, but that USSR and USA both were sinking HUGE amounts of money into space missions; their respective space exploration groups got money equal to the entire military budget for a while there. They operate now on a relative shoe string budget, making the Rovers just as incredible for achieving so much and such longevity on a fraction of the money and time invested.
@@Beryllahawk materials are more expensive nowadays in general due to natural resources becoming more limited. It might not be the entire reason for the slow down of space missions but it’s definitely a reason. If only they put that much money into ocean exploration we could have floating cities and less cars
It's about 50ºc higher temp then a thin-crust pizza oven that cooks a pizza in 3 minutes.
As they were Russian, they're often overlooked.
The Soviets had no luck with Mars, so they concentrated on Venus. Then again, it's not that easy to get to Venus, despite its proximity.
Imagine if an advanced lifeform on Venus studied Earth and concluded that there isn't enough sulphuric acid in our atmosphere to support life.
What kind of lifeforms could live on a planet with so much corrosive oxygen!!!! And the H2O!!!!
I heard an alien tried to destroy Earth seeing as it obscured his view of Venus.
Marvin the Martian.
@@debbiekern2841 thats your first mistake, you imagined life form as organic creature
@@armandb.8737we don't know life in any other form than organic, until we encounter anything different there is no reason to think life comes in other "form", it's just sci-fi, nothing more....
8:46 The obligatory "hot enough to melt lead" quote
When hot enough to melt ice 🧊 just won't do 😂
I prefer "hot enough to bake bread in 14 milliseconds"
Not quite as well used as
"Where nothing, not even light, can escape"
Could be worse. Could've described the sulphuric plumes as "spicy cloud bois." Now if you'll pardon me, I must vomit.
I prefer "hot enough to melt zinc." Zinc's melting point is low for a transition metal, but it's not as famously low, nor is the metal as soft, as lead.
The Venera spacecraft and their missions are some of the most significant astronomical discoveries to ever come out of the USSR. Hats off to them.
Venera went silent because it was probably being slowly boiled into molten metal slag by the Venusian high temperature, or it was being slowly crushed like a beer can by the high Venusian atmospheric pressure.
One or both outcomes could have happened as Venera was transmitting data and images of the planet to Earth.
Venus is not hot enough to melt the metals used, not many a reason to use unalloyed tin or lead, which are the sorts of low melting point metals that would melt at just under 500C. The heat generating electronics though, this is hot enough to make them cease functioin properly, possibly melt the mental in the electronics, but still that would hardly classify the entiee problem as molteb metal by now. Temperature might also weaken the materials enough so that temperature wins and the outter shell implodes due to pressure.
It seems to me the most likely failure point was either the electronics overheating as #1 or solder melting as #2.
@@dontworry1302 Both failures probably occurred within the same amount of time. The Venusian heat and atmospheric pressure doesn't play nice or fair at all.
@@creativedoof My understanding is that the pressure vessel was raised in pressure prior/during reentry to reduce the gradient between inside and out. The pressure on the surface is just insane.
The various seals used on ports for photography and other mission instruments would be the first to fail; also the batteries used to power the instruments, and to keep the internal temperature low enough that the craft's electronics could still function, would quickly run out of energy.
It still blows my mind that we are soo far from the sun yet it still warms our planet so much. I can only imagine how hot mercury and venus must be
Mercury is between minus 180c and plus 430c. The lack of atmosphere is what makes it impossible for it to keep the heat it gains. Opposite reason Venus is so Hot.
Actually, the amount of energy from the sun per square meter on Venus in only double that of Earth - it's not like it's 100 times. For Mercury, it's seven times more energy. A lot in some ways, but not hundreds or thousands of times more energy.
Atmosphere is also a factor.
Mercury is at 800 degrees because it is so close. Venus is at 900 degrees because of the greenhouse
Remarkably even Mars is warmed quite generously by the Sun. In summer in its tropics daytime temperatures get up into the 20s Celsius. If the atmosphere were denser some of that warmth would be retained at night but with so little air most of it is lost.
Fun Fact: Venus is the closest example in the solar system of a planet made of mustard.
can't wait for us to find the mayo planet next
And Mars is made of ketchup then?)
@@aebisdecunter Sriracha
@@leo-ub6nb Now only to find the planet made out of ranch dressing, and half of the USA will immediately book a ticket there.
@@aebisdecunter you underestimate the love of ranch in the US lol
Still waiting for a fire lizards and toxic Serpents on venus
They live below ground on earth didn’t you read your Mesopotamian Tablet?
Only the protomolecule is in there
By my understanding, pulverized remains will be the best you’d get of such things.
I still remember in elementary school, we were looking at the only pictures available of Venus's surface at the time, and the teacher told us that the reason was because Venus's atmosphere is just too hazardous even for NASA's devices. The equipment that was sent to Venus was said to have been struck by lightning and destroyed before getting a quick picture to send back, which made all of the kids start theorizing how to mitigate the lightning strikes for future missions.
The most popular "brilliant" idea that the kids insisted would work was making the space shuttle and rovers out of rubber somehow, because rubber doesn't conduct electricity as well as most metals do. Obviously, the teacher knew this wouldn't work irl, but she struggled to explain _why_ it wouldn't actually work. Still, it was a very memorable class, and it's why I still remember why we know so little about Venus and struggle to learn more.
Electricity will flow through anything if with enough voltage. Lighting's existence is proof. Just need enough voltage (pressure) and you can push it even through rubber.
This is a crude explanation. But I always find it fascinating. We don't understand electricity as much as many people think we do.
The images are at 11:24 for those who just want to see them.
Thanks bro
Dip$hip tik tok kids can’t sit still and just watch a video
there's one at the beginning
@@austins.2495 I came here to see cool images and had to sit through 10 minutes of build up to get to it. Sorry I wasn't here for a full on lesson, I just wanted to see the clickbaity images in the thumbnail.
I've always been more interested in Venus than Mars. Nothing against Mars as I'm massively interested in it too, but I've always found Venus to be more interesting to explore.
At least Venus is warm and has a magnetic field as well as acceptable gravity.
Mars: Naked red boi, honest, accessible, no secrets.
Venus: cloaked in veil of acid mystery, literal hottest planet, matches earth's body type, swirly magic magnetic field.
Can we just thank the Russians for giving those SO precious photos for the whole scientific community?
I thank ‘the Soviets’ for that.
@@rozinator of course, I meant them back in the years lol sry
You cant, you will offend half of western internet sector just by mentioning them
Spasiba 😊
This new background music is a soft and easy departure from the typical Astrum soundtrack. Keep building this library of music! Crafting a unique "sound" for the channel is essential in defining a recognizable style that people will keep tuning in to see/hear. Of course, as a long-time Astrum subscriber, I have the luxury of seeing the before and after 🤗
Music which started around 1/4 through the vid i heard that a lot on 2007 - 2012 natgeo at 5:11
They definitely need to source it in the video description. I need to vibe to it.
I like the idea of a city floating in the barmy oxygen zone, 60 km above the surface. I’d hate to fall off though.
I still think we should "go big" with terraforming. Construct a sun shade at the Lagrange point. Crash a bunch of comets into the planet to add water. Add algae to turn CO2 into oxygen. It'd take thousands of years, but it really could be an "earth 2".
It'd be a dumping ground for bodies in the criminal underworld, very similar to concrete boots!
@@lukeellis758"Youse gonna take da Venera plunge tanight, capishe?"
@@stu729 the evidence would be incinerated too because of the temperature
@@stu729😂😂😂
Alex, I like you man. You sound like you're smiling when you speak.
I was thinking that hahaha
12:17 this image is astonishing to me because not only is this an image of VENUS, a planet alien to us and completely lifeless, it was also taken with technology that is now extremely outdated
Venera #13 and #14 took sound recordings on the surface of Venus. It sounded like a huricane on earth, and i also thought i heard the sound of the song "The Revenge of Vera Gemini" by Blue Oyster Cult"
I always loved looking up at the sky. I grew up on a farm and would waste hours and hours just looking up at the stars. Then we learned about stars and planets in school and even visited a planetarium and it was all grand. But even then, even with photos in a book, planets and stars were not any more real, in a way, than unicorns or dragons. They were things we saw in books and on telly. Too far away to be real. Too fantastic to exist.
But then, the first time I looked through an actual telescope I saw both Venus and Saturn and it was a life changing moment. Things that were just ideas or concepts or fantasy laid right before my eyes. It was both awe inspiring and, in some ways, frightening. They were actually real and how it changed my world. I felt smaller but excited. I didn’t exist in our world any more. I was in a vast universe. It was so humbling but so enlightening at the same time.
This moment has stayed with me my whole life.
I had a friend who was 45 and he said he never looked up into the sky. Ever.
I was born in 1960. When I was a boy, I believed entirely in the older view of Venus as a humid, swampy planet similar to Earth in the Carboniferous period. The discovery of the Hell-like climate of the actual planet was one of the greatest disappointments of the Space age for me, Oh Well! Not all knowledge brings joy.
That's what Ray Bradbury thought in his episode of The Long Rain.
There's a sci-fi concept I always liked.
In the videogame Mass Effect there are a race of creatures called the Krogan. They are by their nature very war-like and aggressive and their society is based highly on dominance and reputation. Their home world Tuchanka is placed in a similar location in it's solar system as Earth is in ours, and like in our solar system, their home system also has a 'Venusian' hothouse-type planet closer in orbit to their star. The Krogan acquired space travel at some point, and then started a ritual tradition of proving manhood amongst the Krogan. What they would do is travel by spacecraft to the 'Venus-type' planet in their solar system and attempt a landing, in person. The Krogan male would land on the surface of a planet that had an atmosphere that was 90x our atmospheric pressure, mostly made of CO2, and 400C temp. Most Krogan would die in the attempt. But, there were a number of Krogan men that would survive and return, and those individuals were revered for the rest of their lives.
EDIT: The Krogan were basically humanoid in shape (head, torso, 4 limbs) but they were 300kg, muscle-bound tanks that had 2 hearts and three lungs and were tough as hell., so scientifically, that's how it was plausible that they survived this ordeal. If a human tried this, they'd die almost instantly. Krogan are built different.
Although it has a different story, this reminds me of "Victory Unintentional", a short story by Isaac Asimov. Three robots are sent to Jupiter to parley with the war-like Jovians who intend to wipe out all humans. It's a comical tale about the hubris of a "master race" written in 1942.
Wouldn’t smaller organisms fair better in a high pressure environment?
@@ferencs6788 i mean that analogy of a car on your fingernail says it all. you cant expect an ant to hold your car
@@Messier42-handle An ant can lift 50x their bodyweight. The strongest man alive benches 5x their bodyweight. I’m not sure how this proves your point.
@@ferencs6788 i know they can but an ant doesnt weigh very much
Dont know if you mentioned, but the channel Stargaze has a fictional person in an indestructible suit entering all the planets and the sun.
“Fictional”? Give the indestructible suit guy some respect! He went all the way out there to get us that footage!
Reading comments and the replies makes me realize why scientific advancements are slower than they should be.
A good teacher is like a candle it consumes itself to light the way for others.
To this day Russia is the only nation to land a probe on Venus, they had to create a new exotic titanium to do it, Venera had to withstand pressures equivalent to 3 miles below sea, the year after Venera Russia built 700ft titanium submarines learned from Venus probe.
Not Russia, but USSR. Russia is light years behind USSR in space exploration despite having a higher budget.
Russia has yet to reach Venus as well.
*higher tech, not budget.
@@ArmaDino22 Russia designed and built Mir and designed ISS from mir-2, Russia's Soyuz rocket as 1700 launches crew/cargo.
@@paulroberts7429 you got all wrong. Mir was a Soviet concept launched in 1986. The ISS is a collaboration between 5 countries, 1 of which is Russia, so not an exclusive Russian project.
As a FYI Soyuz is Russian for Union(Soviet Union). The Soyuz concept was a USSR design, the Russian slightly modernized it and kept using it.
If we are being honest, Russia hasn't innovated a single thing since it broke off from the USSR. All of their craft is just slightly modernized USSR gear built in the 1960's and 1970's. The Soviets were so far ahead of their time, that their technology is still considered top tier even 3 decades after they stopped existing. Russia needs to learn a thing or two from them.
@@ArmaDino22 ISS was designed by Russia from Mir-2, VP al gore bought 2 modules from Roscosmos when he toured, all ISS EV human rated life-support is Russian and holds all the records for human long stay 50yrs of continuously supporting humans, US/EU life-support is experimental and complimentary, Soyuz 1700 launches crew/cargo, US NASA/Lockheed use Russian rd-180 engines on Atlas-3/5 100 launches used on starliner till 2030, Russia has world most powerful rocket engine rd-171 fully recyclable, when US retired shuttle Soyuz for 11yrs was NASA's only ferry to ISS crew/cargo, US paid Russia to train astronauts on MIR, US as been dreadful in space apart from a Nazi moon rocket and a Nazi shuttle designed Kurt debus, China as now beat US on Tiangong space station which is also part Russian Soyuz modules and a robotic arm designed by Russia for mir-2(ISS).
I was just thinking about this planet today, and it rolled up into my YT recommended. crazy how that works
I have a hunch that a lack of a large moon and anemic rotation is what caused Venus to be so hot.
That is a sensible hypothesis.
I've always heard people say it was greenhouse gasses in the athmosphere.
@@thechosenegg9340 Right, that's why it's hot now, and why it's stayed hot. But why does Venus have this accumulation of gases while Earth doesn't? Earth and Venus are almost identical in size and solar radiation, the most obvious differences are the large moon, life, and length of day.
@@thechosenegg9340 that’s a big part of it. Earth has a mechanism to requester gases back into the mantle via tectonics. I suspect the moon has a large part to do with plate tectonics.
@@SuLokifyhow can they be equal in solar radiation when Venus is much closer to the sun.
The high heat at the surface is due to high atmospheric pressure. 90 times higher than earth.
Venus has a high albedo. So the actual solar radiation that reaches the surface is much lower than earth.
We finally see the surface of Venus at 11: 24.
Thank you
11:24
Yeah, too much waffling about. Heck, show how the materials were mined in order to build the craft as well. Also, interview Larry that runs a mining machine and what he eats for lunch. haha!
0:02 ??? there is not a single spec of color in that. Does Venus actually look like that?
Venus looks like that because of the sulfiric acid clouds. They are very reflective.
If I remember correctly the orange pictures come from an early colour choice for radar imagery of venus.
Edit: he explains it at the 5min mark 😅
It has a very thick atmosphere and thousands of clouds so it covers the surface
Reminds me of how everyone (even me) thinks of Neptune… Its colour is almost the same as Uranus.
is your attention span really that bad you can’t watch the video? it’s explained 3 minutes in
well if you had any basic reading skills, it literally says “true colour image” in the top right corner.
The polar vortexes are just close ups of someone's belly button.
😂😂😂
Not a colonoscopy?
There was a woman from Venus,
And she liked a really big....
I prefer the term "vortices".
Colonoscopy
Can't wait for the "Deepest We Have Ever Seen Into Uranus" video.
Sus
😨😨😨💀
Ayo.
That is called a "colonoscopy".
that's a different video hosting site
this channel made me even more interesting in space back when i was in 3rd grade
Venus is easily one of my favourite planets of the Solar System. I really hope we get to see more missions touching the surface and staying for a long time... maybe even a rover! Wish I could see that surface with my own eyes, even though I'd be rushing back to the lander real quick xD
Long term missions let alone a rover are not very practical with current technology. You would have to find a way to keep what ever you send on Venus's surface from melting from the extreme heat for an extended period of time. All of the probes that landed on Venus in the past were only capable of doing that for about 2 hours max.
@@emuhill There's actually been quite a lot of useful development in this regard recently. I can't quote it right now, but NASA had published some successful work on high-temperature processors and they had a mission concept for an "automaton" rover that is as simple as possible to minimise points of failure. Essentially: robotics for high temperature and acidic conditions are hard to make, but general machinery is easy and there is much experience on it already.
Nice job like always! I will certainly be using this video this coming fall unit on planet formation!
Casual person seeing photos of Venus: _What the hell happened here?!_
Scientists: *_THE HELL HAPPENED!_*
There's a private venture sending a mission to Venus to specifically look for life in it's atmosphere. They are using Rocket Labs _Electron_ to get them there for a fraction of what any other system cost at 7.5 million per launch.
How is MIT involved? I mean, is it really 100% private science? MIT is a land grant college that gets federal funding, and not just through subsidized tuition.
@@taxirob2248 That's a question for a tax attorney. I'd recommend you speak to Ura, Douche and Nozzle. Good luck.
@@Kube_Dog I did and they said you're crazy. They said you should go see Dr. Wai Dontyougofuckyourself, he's a well respected psychiatrist.
Yeah sure lol we been to the moon again too lol hahahahahaha bro there's a thin line between luck/science
Astrum we appreciate and love everything you guys do ❤ Please never stop!
This is a remarkable short documentary on venus. Well done 👍
3:57 I liked the video and narration style, but it really throws me when a bunch of graphs with no labels get thrown up on the screen. Please, if you’re going to show them, at least include enough context and information for the viewer to make sense of them.
Your choice of music was excellent throughout. Particularly loved the piece during the radar imaging segment. 14:00 - very powerful! It would be nice if you credit the music as well.
I agree. I loved the trance song at 5:08
@@azman177 Oh yes, terrific tune!
Never ignore a gut feeling, but never believe that it's enough.
Yesss i was hoping for a venus vid from you!
Another excellent presentation, Alex and the Astrum team. This episode gave some really interesting insights into Venus and a desire to learn more as more probes and landers visit her.
Whenever I hear and read about planets with dense atmospheres, I wonder whether this isn't where organisms would be found? Perhaps the variable records of phosphine are due to floating patches or colonies of organisms scattered at altitudes in the clouds where conditions allow them to have evolved. It seems likely that the extreme temperature and pressure ranges as well as crazy wind speed at altitude could produce all sorts of odd chemical reactions and mixing within the clouds.
Interesting point - Venus has much more reactivity than early Earth did. I wonder whether that'd be good or bad. It'd make it easier for a self-replicating molecule (life) to exist, but the odds of winds and heat destroying it are very high too (and even if it manages to reproduce, that applies to the descendants too).
Depending on how small a self-replicating molecule can be, one hypothesis is that there are new "species" pretty frequently, but that they don't get very far before Venusian forces destroy them.
Venera is Russian name for Venus if anybody was wondering 😁
We weren't.
Thanks, but I could not help to get the association to "venereal disease" when reading "venera". lol
@@Tybold63 thanks, how can I unsee it now? 😂
@@Tybold63 Indeed, that's where the root of the word originates in Latin: "Venus" equates with "love" which equates with "sexual activity"
It's so good to finally hear about this project after finding out about it years ago and not finding much discussion, or any generally used educational material, despite how SIGNIFICANT it was.
12:39 This image reminds me so much of the broken data spheres(I forgot what they were, it's been a while) in No Man's Sky. But I'd never forget what they *looked* like. The strings from the parachute were wires going into the ground, though.
I wonder if there's some inspiration here.
Meanwhile a decent photo of an UFO SIGHTING ON EARTH has never been done 😂
Makes you wonder, huh? 😂
@@zeendaniels5809 and yet the government is constantly pushing for us in the media to believe aliens exist. can't make it up.
🙄
- has high surface temperatures
- is closest in size to Earth
Conclusion: Venus is Earth's hot sister
10:24 Is it that they look like a colonoscopy?
Why don't you have one and find out?
Literally one of my favorite topics when it comes to our solar system
We have seen parts of the surface it’s like we’re being teased. so close yet so far.
And the few pictures we have I often look at and feel that curiosity, wonder, uncertainty and more.
Wow, I'm Fascinated By Astronomy & Science, merci.
One who gains strength by overcoming obstacles possesses the only strength which can overcome adversity.
I remember seeing a horribly fuzzy image of Venus's surface in this old space book from i think the 90s or 80s it kinda gave me nightmares, idk the name of the book cause the cover rotted off
The cover rotted off? 😱
Part of the nightmare right there
The bible
Face book?
The undertaking of a new action brings new strength.
I remember watching a documentary once, a long time ago when the BBC used to make real programmes, in which the Venera lander missions was the subject. I vividly remember the Russian engineers interviewed saying that after their failures, one of the test ones was utterly destroyed in a pressure chamber, and they and to make one even stronger to survive.
Of course venus, the planet of love, has two holes lying in close proximity to each other.
Lmao
No you didn't xD
Of sulfuric love 😂😂😂
W😂W
What a stupid comment
Superb video! Thanks!
Nothing is predestined: The obstacles of your past can become the gateways that lead to new beginnings.
It's so amazing that we can see other planets, that we were able to see other worlds. Science is awesome.
I'm so glad that the Venera Program is finally getting the recognition it deserves!
Only addition I would like when showing other Satellites that took images, I wish the year of launch would be included, to allow us to further illustrate to us the differences in technological eras.
this would be a great series to do for all the planets. especially the 7th planet
The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.
So, the surface of Venus is just Mexico 🇲🇽
It seems that Venus underwent something akin to the Permian extinction event, except instead of localized in one particular area, it just straight up exploded, annihilating the crust, deleting plate tectonics, and resulting in the current conditions
Oh, that's what happened! Thanks for the heads up there...
I’d really love for us to send more landers and probs over there. Venus (besides Earth) is the most interesting planet. It feels like we’re looking at earth if things went differently during its formation and history.
And Jupiter as a failed sun.
He who obtains has little. He who scatters has much.
Great video. First I've watched I think, instantly subbed! Thanks 😊
We need cloud cities in Venus’ upper atmosphere that mimic the characteristics of Bespin from Star Wars. It’s been theorized that there’s a sweet spot zone in Venus atmosphere that could be optimal for supporting a structure like this, with some customization in the design to make it viable.
JAXA's Venus orbiter's name is difficult for some to pronounce. It's "uh-COT-ski." Akatsuki has recently lost comm with Earth after almost 25 years of service and deserves a great video of its own. Only Mars Odyssey and ESA's Mars Express are older planetary orbiters. Great video, as usual.
The beginning pronunciation isn't really "uh". The "a" is more pronounced as in "far". The "i" at the end is like the letter "e" in the alphabet.
For the "u" though, I don't have any equivalent, because there's no equivalent in English. But your approximation is good enough.
The rest of the letters can just be pronounced as they appear.
@@rigierish3807 w
@@rigierish3807 akatswki
ah-KAHT-ski
The world shall know Pain
Venus was always one of my favorite planets to learn about thanks for this upload. Very cool stuff.
Why don’t you cover the spacecraft details as to how the vehicle actually traveled through the atmosphere of Venus and landed. Specifically the spacecraft materials and method. The gravity is 8.87 M/S^2. The pressure, temperature, and wind speed are so much higher than on Earth like you mentioned. Seems to be a miracle to land safety with a parachute.
Ive always thought it would be the coolest thing to be like superman (indestructible and can fly fast) and just travel to other planets when I'm bored. Cruising around and looking at what its like. That'd be so cool lol
Dr Manhattan of the Watchmen could.
Since Mars photos are kind of common nowadays, the Venera photos are the most amazing ones to me, especially regarding the primitive technology that created them.
Another two breathtaking photos as these taken by Huyhens probe on Titan and the small video taken by Philae probe during the descent on Churyumov-Gerasimenko comet 😍
The further into space we explore the more evidence is gather that Earth is the only place designed to support life.
Carbon based life as we know it.
Very True, and the more data we collect the more The Rare Earth Theory is proven.
@@TucsonDude Yeah, and what are they always going on about banning? Carbon. 🤔
@@keithmccormack6248Carbon based life and carbon emissions are NOT the same thing.
The only place to support life so far.
This is awesome..love the heavens ❤
Exact asa,Liniste,Venus!Multumesc cu Recunostiinta Astrum!
Based on what I've seen from exoplanet discoveries, Venus is the normal planet and Earth is the weird one.
I've subscribed because the posts are based in facts and historical data. It is not a sensational exhibition. Thanks.
Now make a video about the deepest we’ve seen into Uranus
To dark to see much in there
Change in all things is sweet.
Here's a crazy thought: maybe the main reason Venus and Earth evolved so differently from each other is that their orbits are considerably different distances from the sun.
okay but the fact we even have photos from Venus is insane.
Discovering Venus’ atmospheric temperature created a real warning about runaway greenhouse effect.
It did for the rest of the world, but not for the US apparently.
Outstanding information! I have truly enjoyed watching your video.
Thank you so much for showing Venus!
Thanks for sticking to science - knowns, and unknowns - on this subject.
Video starts at 11:20👍
Thank goodness this video isn't about Uranus. Imagine the title.
vortex → vortices ≠ vortexes
English is quite capable of forming its own plurals. Considering how many people insist on the perfect nonsense of pluralising the Greek "octopus" with the Latin "ii", I think I'll stick with the English pluralisation for all these things, thank you. There was such a thing as the age of linguistic anxiety in English, but it was supposed to be over a couple of centuries ago. That era was not good for the English language.
vortex has been adopted by english and as such english plurals can be applied to it. its why octopuses is a perfectly fine word, or octopodes.
@@eekee6034 someone else who knows the ridiculousness of octopi!
@@eekee6034 It's quite the phenomena.
I think it's funny that the Venera 14's compressibility test failed because the lens cap fell where the compressibility probe extended from the craft
Wow, not only did they attack the Hiddean Leaf Village, but also had a space program? Man, those Akatsuki were a busy bunch eh?
Next time we send something to Venus surface, we should try sending a lot of seeds that could be found in extreme conditions