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Venusian Habitable Climate Scenarios: Modeling Venus Through Time and Applications to Slowly Rotating Venus‐Like ExoplanetsOne popular view of Venus' climate history describes a world that has spent much of its life with surface liquid water, plate tectonics, and a stable temperate climate. Part of the basis for this optimistic scenario is the high deuterium to hydrogen ratio from the Pioneer Venus mission that was interpreted to imply Venus had a shallow ocean's worth of water throughout much of its history. Another view is that Venus had a long lived (~100 million year) primordial magma ocean with a CO2 and steam atmosphere. Venus' long lived steam atmosphere would sufficient time to dissociate most of the water vapor, allow significant hydrogen escape and oxidize the magma ocean. A third scenario is that Venus had surface water and habitable conditions early in its history for a short period of time (< 1$Gyr), but that a moist/runaway greenhouse took effect because of a gradually warming sun, leaving the planet desiccated ever since. Using a general circulation model we demonstrate the viability of the first scenario using the few observational constraints available. We further speculate that Large Igneous Provinces and the global resurfacing 100s of millions of years ago played key roles in ending the clement period in its history and presenting the Venus we see today. The results have implications for what astronomers term ``the habitable zone," and if Venus‐like exoplanets exist with clement conditions akin to modern Earth we propose to place them in what we term the ``optimistic Venus zone."
Document ID
20205000621
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Accepted Manuscript (Version with final changes)
Authors
M J Way ORCID
(Goddard Institute for Space Studies New York, United States)
Anthony D Del Genio
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Date Acquired
April 8, 2020
Publication Date
April 8, 2020
Publication Information
Publication: JGR: Planets
Publisher: American Geophysical Union
Volume: 125
Issue: 5
Issue Publication Date: May 1, 2020
e-ISSN: 2169-9100
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 811073.02.52.01.08.16
WBS: 811073.02.36.01.56
WBS: 811073.02.10.03.17
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Venus
Habitability
Exoplanets
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