Water activity in Venus's uninhabitable clouds and other planetary atmospheres

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  • John E. Hallsworth
    Queen's University, Belfast
  • Thomas Koop
    Bielefeld University
  • Tiffany Dallas
    Queen's University, Belfast
  • Maria-Paz Zorzano
    University of Aberdeen
  • Juergen Burkhardt
    Universitat Bonn
  • Olga Golyshina
  • Javier Martin-Torres
    University of Aberdeen
  • Marcus K. Dymond
    University of Brighton
  • Philip Ball
  • Christopher P. McKay
    NASA Ames Research Center
The recent suggestion of phosphine in Venus’s atmosphere has regenerated interest in the idea of life in clouds. However, such analyses usually neglect the role of water activity, which is a measure of the relative availability of water, in habitability. Here we compute the water activity within the clouds of Venus and other Solar System planets from observations of temperature and water-vapour abundance. We find water-activity values of sulfuric acid droplets, which constitute the bulk of Venus’s clouds, of ≤0.004, two orders of magnitude below the 0.585 limit for known extremophiles. Considering other planets, ice formation on Mars imposes a water activity of ≤0.537, slightly below the habitable range, whereas conditions are biologically permissive (>0.585) at Jupiter’s clouds (although other factors such as their composition may play a role in limiting their habitability). By way of comparison, Earth’s troposphere conditions are, in general, biologically permissive, whereas the atmosphere becomes too dry for active life above the middle stratosphere. The approach used in the current study can also be applied to extrasolar planets.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)665-675
JournalNature Astronomy
Volume5
Issue number7
Early online date28 Jun 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2021

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