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TechScience & Research

Here’s why you should never, ever visit the surface of Venus

From the pressure to the heat, it is ‘like Hell on Earth’

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A colourised photo of the surface of Venus. It was taken by Russia's Venera 13 spacecraft on March 1, 1982. Photo: Soviet Space Agency; IPF APOD; Don P. Mitchell
Business Insider

If there’s one patch of solid ground in the solar system you should never, ever visit, it’s the surface of Venus.

Not even hardened robotic probes are a match for conditions there. One of the last to make it to the planet’s surface — Russia’s Venera 13 lander — barely lasted 2 hours before croaking.

“Venus is very, very corrosive,” Gustavo Costa, a chemist and materials scientist at NASA Glenn Research Center, recently told Business Insider.

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“It’s like Hell on Earth,” Costa said. “It’s very harsh.”

Costa would know. He works on the Glenn Extreme Environments Rig (GEER): a 14-ton steel chamber that can faithfully recreate the toxic, choking, and scorching-hot conditions on the surface of Venus, a once-habitable twin of Earth gone very, very wrong.

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NASA fired up GEER for the first time in 2014, permitting Costa and other researchers to exposed all kinds of metals, ceramics, wires, mesh, plating, and electronics to their tiny version of Hell to see what lasts — and what gets obliterated.

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