Scientists believe there could be potential lifeforms producing ammonia in the clouds of Venus that are “very unlike anything we’ve seen”.The colourless gas, a compound of nitrogen and hydrogen, could be a sign of a range of chemical reactions that would make the planet more habitable to alien life.On our planet, ammonia is a left-over waste from aquatic organisms.Venus is so hot that it is reportedly very unlikely possible to harbour life forms, and if there does happen to be life in the clouds it is likely to be tiny microbes like Earth bacteria.In a new study, researchers from Cardiff University, MIT and Cambridge University modelled a set of chemical processes to see that, if ammonia was present, it would set off a series of chemical.
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