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Some people used the start of the pandemic to up their bread-making skills; one MIT professor and her son set up experiments to see if the building blocks of life could survive in the clouds of Venus
By adamg on Wed, 03/20/2024 - 10:52am
MIT News reports on experiments that showed that amino acids, a key building block of life on earth, might be able to survive in the sulfuric-acid clouds that make up the atmosphere on Venus.
Among the contributors to an article in Astrobiology are MIT astrophysicist and planetary biologist Sara Seager and her son Maxwell, a student at Worcester Polytechnic. MIT News says the two "began their studies of sulfuric acid during the pandemic, carrying out their experiments in a home laboratory."
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Highly corrosive acid based
Highly corrosive acid based alien lifeforms. "It's life Jim, but not as we know it." I wonder if in such a harsh environment; Could sentient life develop?
Did anyone read the whole abstract and understand it?