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  • Leaving earth to find new homes in space is an old dream of humanity and will sooner or

  • later be necessary for our survival. The planet that gets the most attention is Mars, a small,

  • toxic and energy poor planet that just about seems good enough for a colony of depressed

  • humans huddled in underground cities.

  • But what if we think bigger? What if we take Venus, one of the most hostile and deadly

  • places in the solar system and turn IT into a colony? Not by building lofty cloud cities,

  • but by creating a proper second earth? It might be easier than you think.

  • Venus is by far the hottest planet in the solar system with a surface temperature of

  • 460°C, hot enough to melt lead. This heat is due to the most extreme greenhouse effect

  • in the solar system. CO2 is great at trapping heateven a rise from 0.03% to 0.04% in

  • Earth's atmosphere is heating up our planet right now. Venus's atmosphere is 97% CO2.

  • Also, Venus's atmosphere is 93 times denser than earth's. Standing on Venus' surface

  • would feel like taking a dive about 900 meters deep into the ocean. The pressure would kill

  • you instantly.

  • It's a truly horrible place! So why should we even bother?

  • First and foremost, Venus is almost as big as Earth and has 90% of its surface gravity.

  • Surface gravity is a big problem when colonizing the solar system because it is very likely

  • that long stays in low gravity places will have negative health effects.

  • Venus' size means it could be the second largest habitat in the solar system. A new

  • home for billions of humans and trillions of animals. With oceans, lush forests and

  • a beautiful blue sky. A properly terraformed Venus may be the most pleasant place to live

  • outside of Earth.

  • While we can't exactly terraform Venus today, a slightly more ambitious future version of

  • us COULD take this project on. It will take a few generations to complete and be a huge

  • challengelike building the great pyramids was for our ancestors. But then it's not

  • like humans have never started projects that took more than a lifetime to complete.

  • Ok! Let's do it!

  • Before anything else, we need to cool Venus down and remove the gas that makes up the

  • extremely heavy atmosphere. As mentioned, there is a lot of it. Around 465 million billion

  • tons.

  • How do we do that? There are a few options. We could create giant solar collectors powering

  • a huge array of laser beams, that heat up the atmosphere so much that it is blasted

  • into space. Although we would need thousands of times the entire power generating capacity

  • of humanity and it would still take thousands of years to remove the atmosphere.

  • Another way is to sequester the atmosphere. Binding the CO2 in different compounds through

  • chemical reactions. We could mine elements like Calcium or Magnesium on Mercury and shoot

  • them at Venus via mass driver systemsElectric rails that make rockets unnecessary on smaller

  • planets. The metals would combine to bind the CO2 into different carbonates basically

  • forever. But the scale makes the whole thing impractical. We would need several hundred

  • billion tons of material to sequester the CO2 this way. Seems like a waste of material

  • and might take too long.

  • An equally ridiculous idea that could actually work is to put Venus in the shade. Literally.

  • By constructing a huge mirror to blot out the sun to just freeze the atmosphere. The

  • mirror does not need to be complex or massive, just a very thin foil with a little structural

  • support. Building such a large flat surface so close to the sun will turn it effectively

  • into a solar sail and push it out of position, so instead of one giant circular object, our

  • mirror will consist of many different pieces.

  • Annular slats of angled mirrors can reflect sunlight from one set of mirrors to the next.

  • Mirrors would be angled, reflecting light from one to another until the light is redirected

  • to the back - balancing the force on the front and holding them in position.

  • After a few years of getting the infrastructure in place, things start slowly and then escalate.

  • For the first few decades, the atmosphere slowly cools down but stays dense and deadly.

  • Until, after some 60 years it reaches the critical temperature of 31° Celsius. Suddenly,

  • the Great Flood begins on Venus, as CO2 turns to liquid at this pressure and begins to rain

  • down- a constant global rainstorm of unbelievable proportions lasting 30 years. The pressure

  • and temperature suddenly begin to drop in unison. For almost a century, puddles turn

  • into lakes and oceans.

  • The surface temperature is now -56° Celsius and the pressure has dropped to only seven

  • times the pressure on earth. Finally, at a really unpleasant -81°, the CO2 oceans begin

  • to freeze and the rain turns into snow. This leaves us with a frozen Venus covered in oceans

  • as hard as rock and gigantic CO2 glaciers. What remains of the atmosphere is mostly nitrogen,

  • at about 3 times earth's surface pressure. If you don't mind freezing and suffocating,

  • you can now take a stroll over Venus' surface.

  • But the frozen CO2 remains a bit of a problem. At some point we want to warm up the planet,

  • but if we do, the CO2 ice will melt and fill up the atmosphere again.

  • So we need some way to keep it from doing that.

  • One is to simply cover it all with cheap plastic insulation and cover it up with ground-up

  • venus rock or water oceans. Although some planetary scientists will be very stressed

  • out about us building a new planet containing a potential timebomb like that. A few unfortunately

  • timed volcanoes could melt a lot of CO2 at once and ruin everything.

  • Another obvious solution is to shoot it all out into space and collect it into a small

  • moon for storage and future use. We can make this more efficient by using mass drivers

  • instead of rockets, but moving all that mass will still be a pretty intense challenge that

  • will take some time to solve.

  • Whatever we end up doing with the atmosphere, to move forward we need water, which we could

  • get from Ice-Moons. Europa, a moon of Jupiter, has twice as much water as Earth's oceans.

  • Now catching a moon and transporting it through the solar system is not exactly easy.

  • So instead it might be easier to cut chunks of ice off Europa with an army of construction

  • drones and shoot them at Venus using more of those mass drivers. Space tethers could

  • save us a lot of effort and energy herewe made a whole video explaining how they work,

  • but in a nutshell, they are slings that can take a payload on both ends.

  • On Europa, they do most of the work needed to catapult our ice to Venus. The ice hits

  • the Venus tethers, which gently drop it into the atmosphere, where it falls down as snow.

  • In exchange, the Venus tethers get to catch CO2 ice shot up from below and accelerate

  • it into orbit. We can remove excess nitrogen using this same

  • method to further lower our atmospheric pressure.

  • After a few decades or centuries, Venus would be covered by a nice, shallow frozen ocean

  • a few hundred meters deep. It would look extremely different from today. A few continents and

  • countless islands have formed. This is beginning to look a bit like our planet!

  • Now the last and most magnificent phase of terraforming begins: Making the atmosphere

  • breathable and adding life.

  • First we need light though and we need to heat the planet up again. A Venus day is 2802

  • hours long. More than 116 Earth days. So if we just remove our giant mirror, we would

  • grill half of our planet. Even without the massive atmosphere, temperatures would reach

  • unbearable levels. The simplest way to create a day/night cycle and let some energy in again,

  • is with another set of mirrors to illuminate our continents and melt our water oceans.

  • Which would let us completely control how much energy we get and where it goes.

  • The atmosphere is now mostly made up of nitrogen and basically devoid of oxygen. So the first

  • inhabitants will likely be trillions and trillions of Cyanobacteria, which can get photosynthesising

  • and release oxygen. We know that they can quickly turn around the atmosphere of a planet

  • because billions of years ago, they were probably responsible for turning the toxic atmosphere

  • of our young Earth into an atmosphere with enough oxygen for more complex animal life.

  • But not only thatCyanobacteria can fix Nitrogen from the atmosphere and turn it into

  • nutrients that can be used by living beings. This way they will essentially fertilize our

  • dead ocean water and prepare it for more complex organisms.

  • On land, our colonists need to grind down some of the former venusian surface to make

  • soil for nitrogen fixing plants to grow on. Eventually billions of trees would spread

  • creating large forests, covering massive parts of the continents. Venus would turn green.

  • First the oceans, then the land. To speed things up, CO2 would be strategically released

  • to supply the plants and cyanobacteria. Areas already covered with plants could get extra

  • daylight from our orbital mirrors, so the plants would be active for most of each day.

  • Maybe, we won't have to do this with the same plants and animals we know today. As

  • genetic engineering matures and our understanding of genetics and the machinery of life expands,

  • we might just engineer life as we need it.

  • All in all, it would take several thousand years to make the atmosphere breathable by

  • humans. In the meantime, you could stroll around with nothing more than regular clothes

  • and an oxygen mask. Settlers would enjoy a vast new planet, filled with resources and

  • bathed in sunlight. They might think of new ways to use the vast amounts of carbon dioxide

  • ice and nitrogen orbiting in space above. Industrial processes, rocket fuel or even

  • boosting the terraforming of another planet, like tiny Mars

  • Venus is fully terraformed. Animals roam through vast ecosystems. Cities are being constructed.

  • Billions of settlers and their descendants make this world their home. They will see

  • images of the past. How Venus was once the most hostile planet around. How it took hundreds

  • of years to freeze hell and to ship in the oceans and another few thousand years to make

  • it possible to breathe freely. They will barely be able to believe it.

  • Ok. Maybe it is not that easy to terraform Venus and a lot of things must go right for

  • this future to become reality. But it is possible and with technology that is within the reach

  • of a motivated and slightly more advanced humanity that wants to venture into space.

  • The only thing that is stopping it is our imagination. And that at least is a problem

  • that's easy to overcome.

  • If you think about it, your imagination is the only thing stopping you from doing all

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Leaving earth to find new homes in space is an old dream of humanity and will sooner or

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