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					Signs of the existence of life were discovered on Venus
					Two teams of scientists have announced that, as a result of new observations of Venus using ground-based telescopes, they have discovered two gases in the planet’s atmosphere – phosphine and ammonia. These gases indicate the potential existence of alien life. 
It is worth saying that the temperature on Venus is so high that metals can melt, and the atmosphere is very toxic. Simply put, Venus is not the most habitable planet. Yet extraterrestrial life may be hiding in the clouds of the second planet from the Sun, writes The Guardian.
Scientists have found evidence of phosphine and ammonia in the atmosphere of the toxic and hot planet.
On the surface of Venus, the temperature reaches 450 degrees Celsius, that is, it is hot enough to melt lead and zinc. The pressure on the planet is 90 times higher than the pressure on Earth. And the atmosphere of Venus is filled with toxic sulfur.
Two teams of scientists have announced that, as a result of new observations of Venus using ground-based telescopes, they have discovered two gases in the planet’s atmosphere – phosphine and ammonia. These gases indicate the potential existence of alien life. 
It is worth saying that the temperature on Venus is so high that metals can melt, and the atmosphere is very toxic. Simply put, Venus is not the most habitable planet. Yet extraterrestrial life may be hiding in the clouds of the second planet from the Sun, writes The Guardian.
Both phosphine and ammonia are among the so-called biosignature gases that may indicate the presence of life. But new discoveries cannot yet serve as proof that life on Venus really exists, even if not on the surface, but in the clouds of the planet. 
Scientists say the new data raises the possibility that life on Venus may have emerged and flourished in the distant past, when the planet had a more temperate climate. It is also possible that this life in the form of microbes may still inhabit the planet’s atmosphere.
On the surface of Venus, the temperature reaches 450 degrees Celsius, that is, it is hot enough to melt lead and zinc. The pressure on the planet is 90 times higher than the pressure on Earth. And the atmosphere of Venus is filled with toxic sulfur.
But at an altitude of about 50 km from the surface of Venus, temperature and pressure levels are closer to those on Earth, meaning potentially very hardy microbes could survive there, scientists say.
The results of the new research are preliminary and more observations are needed to say for sure that phosphine and ammonia are present in the atmosphere of Venus. 
If this is the case, then the next step for scientists will be to try to find a possible biological source of these gases. Or maybe these gases are still created as a result of unknown chemical processes on Venus, which can also be discovered.
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