Discovering scorpions living on Venus?

A Russian scientist claimed to have found life on Venus, a finding that if accurate, would upset the entire previous human understanding of the solar system.

>>>Venus glides across the sun

Leonid Ksansfomaliti, an expert at the Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, said that after analyzing photographs captured by a Russian satellite when landing on the surface of Venus 30 years ago, he saw a body with scorpion, a CD and some other black objects. More notably, it seems they are moving at the time the satellite camera records the scene.

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Scientist Ksansfomaliti claims to have found "mobile" organisms on the surface of Venus

Venus is the most similar planet with Earth in our solar system, both in size and structure. Its diameter is 7521 miles, insignificantly smaller than Earth's diameter of 7926 miles. However, Venus's surface is very different: this is the hottest planet in the solar system, because its atmosphere has 97% of greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. According to scientists, Venus's regular surface temperature is 480C, hot enough to melt lead. Even this heat is higher than Mercury, which is the closest planet to the Sun.

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Scorpion shape on a photograph taken by Russian satellites in 1982.

In addition, atmospheric pressure is 96 times higher than Earth. And Venus is the only planet in the solar system to 'turn around' when the sun rises in the West and dives in the East.

'All of these objects appear, fluctuate and disappear suddenly , ' said Ksanfomaliti in the Journal of Solar System Research.

'If we can forget all the current theories about the existence of life on Venus, based on mere morphological characteristics, then it can be assumed that they are living things.' .

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Venus is most similar to Earth in our solar system

Previously, there have not been any reports of the recognition of life on Venus. However, according to DailyMail , scientists do not dare to rule out the possibility of ever having life on this planet, although most studies only focus on finding traces of the ocean and life in the early stages. Originally, before the 'greenhouse effect' gave Venus such a terrible surface temperature.

'Current theories suggest that Venus and Earth have quite similar origins. There used to be a lot of water on Venus , "Caltech Professor Andrew Ingersoll said in a study published in Astrobiology in 2004.

Since the Russian satellite visited the planet, many of NASA's exploration ships have also landed and captured more detailed, sharper images of the Venusian surface: All have no trace of life. . For example, NASA's Magellan ship landed on Venus in August 1990 with 10 times higher resolution than the Soviet Venera satellite.