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Venus Airships / by Brad Guth



 
 
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Old May 30th 08, 05:30 AM posted to rec.aviation.balloon,rec.aviation.piloting,rec.aviation.military,sci.space.history,alt.astronomy
BradGuth
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Default Venus Airships / by Brad Guth

On May 29, 8:59 am, (Andrew Robert Breen) wrote:
In article ,
Jay Maynard wrote:

On 2008-05-29, BradGuth wrote:
How about the required technical expertise of flying such an airship
(robotic or manned) within that thick soup of the Venusian lower
atmosphere?


How does this relate to rec.aviation.piloting? Nobody here knows anything
about the subject, largely because *nobody* knows anything about the
subject.


Though it pains me to even reply to a reply to the manifestly
delusional Guthball, balloons - though not airships - /have/
been flown in Venus atmosphe at least two of the Soviet
missions to Venus in the 80s launched aerostats, and they yielded
some very interesting (and, in some cases, still not fully
explained) measurements of atmospheric composition[1]. They
were flying in the upper cloud layers, mind. The Venera landers
established pretty well why you'd not try to fly balloons
near the surface. Too dam' hot, and boiling H2SO4 rain would
hurt, too.


At 35 km or below by day, or perhaps of 25 km or below by season of
nighttime is crystal dry and harmless, whereas that H2SO4 and even
pure S8 is relatively crystal dry, and thus kinda harmless stuff.

Are you saying there's lots of water within them thick and robust
clouds? (because you'd be correct)


[1] And dynamics. Because it rotates so slowly and because
of the angle of its rotation axis, Venus has /very/ odd
weather systems..


That's always good to know about, especially before cruising any
composite form of a rigid airship well below them acidic clouds.
.. - Brad Guth
 




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