It’s a bit chilly this morning, at least for south Florida. As I looked at the weather app when I was getting up, it reported that the temperature near me was about 51 degrees Fahrenheit. We can take 32 away from that then multiply by 5/9‒so that’s 19 x 5, which is 95, divided by 9‒which gives just over 10 degrees Centigrade (or Celsius, depending upon whom one asks).
I guess that’s pretty cool, though certainly there are many places north of here where people would welcome it as a relatively balmy day for this time of year. Alternatively, in parts of the southern hemisphere, where it is summer, it would seem aberrantly cold, even more noteworthy than it is in my neck of the subtropical woods. Going farther afield, on Mars it would be truly a record-setting heat wave, whereas on Venus, such a temperature would be impossibly, unfathomably cold.
The surface temperature of Venus is, if memory serves, around 900º Fahrenheit, or nearly 500º Centigrade, or nearly 800 Kelvin (I am rounding the Kelvin “273” addition to Centigrade because I only have one significant figure in my recalled estimate of Venus’s average temperature in Fahrenheit, and adding other specific digits would be misleading and unjustified).
It’s interesting that Venus, the planet named for the goddess of sexual and romantic love, is the most hellish planet in the solar system. It’s hot enough at the surface to melt lead. The atmospheric pressure is 90 times that of Earth and largely consists of carbon dioxide. The cloud cover is constant and it rains sulfuric acid.
Perhaps Venus, the morning “star” (and the evening “star” too, depending on which side of the sun it’s currently on from Earth’s point of view) is more appropriately given one of its other names, which is: Lucifer, the light-bearer, herald of the dawn, who in later mythology was associated with the Devil (at least before his fall).
Of course, it’s hard to reconcile Lucifer’s supposed fall with the fact that the planet is still conspicuously up there in the sky. And I do mean “conspicuously”. Apart from the sun and the moon, Venus is easily the brightest thing in the night sky. Sometimes one can still see it even as the sun is beginning to rise; the cloud cover of Venus makes it highly reflective of visible light.
Anyway, I find it sardonically and cynically amusing that the goddess of love is associated with a nightmarish hellscape, but I have a personal history that makes me look askance at romance. I am, in other words, biased.
Venus is a good object lesson in the potent effects of carbon dioxide’s tendency to allow visible but not infrared light to pass easily through it, and so to create a “greenhouse effect” even in the modest concentration it achieves on Earth.
The physics of this is well understood, relating largely to the resonant frequency of the bonds in the molecule as well as its size and shape. Smaller, tighter molecules like molecular nitrogen and molecular oxygen, the two gasses that make up the vast majority of Earth’s atmosphere, don’t interact much with infrared light, and are more prone to scatter shorter, bluer wavelengths of visible light‒this is a rough explanation of why the sky is blue (and why the sunrise and sunset are much redder, as that sunlight is going through more of the atmosphere due to the angle at which we see the sun at those times of day, and the blue is partly scattered out of it, leaving relatively more redder light behind).
Anyway, the broad physics of the greenhouse effect is almost elementary, and has been understood for a long time. The specifics of what precisely will happen in any given set of circumstances can be tricky to tease out, given the complexity of reality‒you might say that Venus is in the details‒but the specifics are often less important than the broad strokes.
After all, when a giant asteroid is heading toward the Earth, it isn’t that reassuring to know that only, say, 75% of species will be driven extinct by its impact, and that life will survive and eventually once again thrive. How much would someone have to pay you for you to be willing to accept a 75% chance that just you will die, let alone everyone like you on the planet?
There might well be a big enough sum for you to be willing to risk your own life, especially if you got to enjoy the money for a while before the dice were thrown, or to leave it to your heirs. But for your whole species? Is there a reward big enough to be able to take that chance? Let’s assume you’re not a raging misanthrope/panantipath like I am for the sake of this question, since depending on my mood, I’d be inclined to negotiate for a higher chance of extinction.
Also, of course, by pretty much every possible form of ethics you might follow, you don’t have the right to roll the dice on all the members of your own species. You don’t have any right to roll the dice on the members of your own family, unless they unilaterally and spontaneously and freely grant you that right.
Sorry, I don’t know why I’m writing about these topics today. They are just what spewed out of me, like vomit from the proverbial drunkard or pus from a squeezed abscess. I wish I could write something more interesting, or write something that helped my mood some. Writing fiction did at least help fight my depression, but it’s hard when almost no one reads my stuff.
Maybe I should take to writing at least a page of fiction a day by hand, on the notebook paper and clipboard I have at the office, during downtime, instead of watching videos. Yesterday I mainly watched ones about spontaneous symmetry breaking and the electro-weak era and the Higgs mechanism. To be fair to me, it’s very interesting stuff, and it actually would have some relevance to my potential comic book turned manga turned science fiction story, HELIOS.
Of course, that’s named for another mythological figure, one that’s even hotter than Venus. But I don’t know if I can write it. Motivation is difficult. Still, as Stephen King reputedly once told Neil Gaiman, if you write just one page a day, by the end of a year you’ll have a decent-sized novel*.
Once I get writing, I have a hard time stopping at only one page. If you’re a regular reader of my blog, you’ll probably know this implicitly‒my general target for post length is about 800 words, but I almost never am able to keep it that short.
I guess we’ll see what happens. And, of course, I’ll keep you all…posted.
*He has also noted that, for him‒as I have often found it to be for me‒writing fiction is the best form of therapy.

Took me a while to get to this one. I DID find it interesting. Good luck with the writing. Only if you’re having fun, though. My wish for you is that you cease to judge yourself based on your output, or how many books you did or didn’t read. It really is enough that you keep getting up and going to work. Take credit for that. It’s earned. Thanks for your blog
Thank YOU.