So, this is odd...
A paper was published today detailing the discovery of phosphine gas in clouds in the atmosphere of Venus. Phosphine is a gas which is produced by bacterial life on Earth, and its presence elsewhere may be a strong indicator of biological activity. The team behind the discovery claim any other known method of producing phosphine in the clouds would only produce about 0.01% of the amount they detected.
Their observations were detected by two independent telescope arrays, many months apart. Here on Earth, phosphine has a lifetime of a few hours, and while thought to be higher on Venus, the short lifetime indicates there is a continuous production of phosphine.
Their data also indicates that the gas is only found at certain latitudes, which correspond to where we would expect a biological source to survive. However, the clouds in which it was detected are comprised of sulphuric acid, which means if the source of this gas is a result of life, it is either life which has significantly different biochemistry to anything we know, or bacteria which has developed a shield against one of the strongest acids there are.
Alternatively, this is being produced by a (non-biological) chemical reaction which is something we've never seen before. Phosphine is naturally produced in Jupiter and Saturn, but those conditions cannot exist on Venus. If this is chemistry, it's new chemistry.
Link to the paper published:
https://rdcu.be/b7bDSLink to a BBC News article on the subject:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-54133538Thoughts?