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Into the Impossible With Brian Keating

Did Scientists Discover Life on Venus? MIT Professor Sara Seager and The Verge’s Loren Grush (#075)

Into the Impossible With Brian Keating

Brian Keating

Physics, Natural Sciences, Science

4.71.1K Ratings

🗓️ 17 September 2020

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A conversation with MIT Professor Sara Seager and The Verge Journalist Loren Grush, with Prof. Brian Keating. Loren Grush writes: “Deep within the acidic clouds of Venus, astronomers have detected a tantalizing gas never found on the planet before — a gas that, remarkably, could be a sign of life on the hellish world. The gas’s presence isn’t enough to say for sure that Venus hosts life forms, but the fact that it exists in the planet’s clouds indicates that something is going on there that we don’t fully understand.” Read the press release: https://news.mit.edu/2020/life-venus-phosphine-0914 Watch the press release from MIT: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCXF8FUux74 Read Loren’s coverage of the announcement: https://www.theverge.com/21428796/venus-gas-life-sign-discovery-phosphine-biosignature Project Website: https://venuscloudlife.com “The gas in question is a nasty one called phosphine, a toxic and explosive molecule with a lingering odor of garlic and dead fish. Astronomers discovered the putrid gas lurking within a layer of clouds on Venus, where temperatures are pretty close to those on our planet. They didn’t find much — just small traces in the swirling mix of sulfuric acid clouds that surround the planet. “It’s equivalent to a few tablespoons in an Olympic sized swimming pool,” David Clements, an astrophysicist at the Imperial College of London and part of the team that made the discovery, tells The Verge. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

0:07.0

Welcome everybody to a very special edition of the Into the Impossible

0:15.9

podcast in this time of pandemic podcasting I am likely to say I'm your fearful

0:21.5

host I'm no longer feelus, but I'm feeling a little bit more

0:25.8

hopeful, I suppose, because of today's excitement, and today's announcement led in part by one of our guests today.

0:34.1

I'll introduce you to in just a second.

0:36.4

And I have two guests today for my first ever dual guest

0:40.2

live stream on the Into the Impossible podcast. It could be either the first

0:43.5

experiment or the last experiment, who knows. But I'm joined by MIT professor

0:48.6

Dr Sarah Seiger who is joining us from Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she has been having a very busy day.

0:56.4

So first of all, I want to say thank you to Sarah.

0:58.6

I'll put you up there.

0:59.4

There you are.

1:00.4

Hi, Sarah.

1:01.4

Hi, thank you for having me.

1:02.4

Thanks for joining us. Yeah, I mean I really kind of reached out through

1:06.0

nefarious methods contacting people that I know know you. I won't say who, but I was able to get in touch with you and I'm so glad that we were able to contact each

1:14.8

other. And similarly Lauren Grush who's joining us from New York City where she is

1:22.1

or she has been writing for the verge for quite some time.

1:25.0

I've been a fan of her work for many years and she's covered many, many wonderful and

1:30.0

fascinating announcements throughout science and beyond and she was

1:33.8

introduced to me by a previous guest on the show which is Sarah skulls who

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