planet and closer to the Sun, is dry because the hydrogen in its atmosphere gets lost into space, thereby robbing the planet of one of the two elements needed for water to form, according to new research. Co-lead author and a research scientist at the University of Colorado Boulder, US, Eryn Cangi, described Venus to be «positively parched.»
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«If you took all the water on Earth and spread it over the planet like jam on toast, you'd get a liquid layer roughly 3 kilometres deep.
»If you did the same thing on Venus, where all the water is trapped in the air, you'd wind up with only 3 centimetres, barely enough to get your toes wet," she explained.
However, Venus wasn't always such a desert, the researchers said.
When Venus was formed about a billion years ago, the planet received about as much water as Earth. But at some point, a powerful greenhouse effect was kicked off by clouds of carbon dioxide in the planet's atmosphere, raising temperatures to a «roasting» 500 degrees Celsius, they explained.
The catastrophe led to all of Venus's water being evaporated into steam and most of it drifted off into space, the authors said. Their study is published in the journal Nature.
However, the ancient evaporation cannot explain why Venus is as dry as it is today, or why the planet continues to lose its water, they said.
In the latest study, using computer simulations, the researchers found the «culprit» to be a molecule found in the planet's upper