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Geo.X Topics in Planetary Interiors - talk by Dr. Tobias Rolf: The evolution of Venus: a geodynamics perspective on what we know, need to know, and will hopefully soon know

  Scientific Talks

Date: Monday, 12th December 2022, 4:15 p.m.

Venue: The presentations will be held via Zoom. Access upon request.

Speaker: Dr. Tobias Rolf, University of Oslo // Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics

Organizers:  Sergey S.Lobanov (Universität Potsdam), Ana Plesa (DLR), Ingrid Blanchard (Universität Potsdam), Christoph Sens-Schönfelder (GFZ)

All people interested are invited!

Dear all,

we cordially invite you to the next talk in our seminar series Geo.X Topics in Planetary Interiors on Monday, 12th December (4.15 pm CET).

Tobias Rolf (University of Oslo // Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics) will give a talk on

 

The evolution of Venus: a geodynamics perspective on what we know, need to know, and will hopefully soon know

 

The exploration of Venus is as old as interplanetary exploration itself and started when Mariner 2 encountered Venus in 1962. Six decades of exploration later, however, Venus remains an enigmatic planet. Its bulk properties – such as size and bulk density – are very similar to Earth’s, but Venus presents a hostile face with hellish surface conditions that likely inhibit the formation of life and complicate exploration with in-situ spacecrafts. Yet, understanding Venus – at present and its past – is so important for our understanding of Earth by providing a unique archive potentially analogous to the early Earth. Remote sensing has delivered various observables with which the state of Venus’ atmosphere and of the volcano-tectonic processes shaping the surface can be deciphered. But a major difficulty remains the lack of sufficient temporal constraints with which the observations can be brought into a meaningful evolution of Venus through geological time. The available data in combination with ever-advancing modelling techniques for the planet’s interior have suggested several evolutionary pathways, however, no option can yet be preferred. The key question why Venus’ evolution diverged from the Earth’s remains poorly understood.
In this presentation, I will summarise what we know about Venus from the available data and from state-of-the-art dynamic modelling. I will emphasize the limits of what we know, will outline what we still need to find out, and how the confirmed missions to Venus – Veritas, DaVinci, and EnVision – will hopefully boost our insight.

If you are interested in attending the seminar series, please contact Dr. Sergey S. Lobanov (lobanov1@uni-potsdam.de) or Ingrid Blanchard (blanchard@uni-potsdam.de) for the Zoom details.  

 

On behalf of the organizers,

Sergey Lobanov

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