IT USED to be called Earth鈥檚 twin. With much the same size, mass and composition as our home, Venus was a lush jungle planet in the popular imagination of the early 20th century. Muggier than Earth, perhaps, but otherwise not so very different.
That, of course, turned out to be entirely incorrect. Venus鈥檚 surface is sweltering and its atmosphere suffocating: its being closer to the sun made a dramatic, not an incremental, difference to its fate.
That realisation has all but extinguished hopes of finding a twin for any earthly environment in our solar system. (Iced-over oceans on moons of the gas giants are almost our last hope.)
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So the search for Earth鈥檚 twin has moved much further afield: to the families of other stars. Work to identify the 鈥渉abitable zones鈥 in which such planets might exist has turned up some startling insights 鈥 not just about them, but also our own planet (see 鈥Goodbye, Goldilocks: is life on Earth heading for an earlier demise?鈥).
If the latest models are accurate, Earth and Venus really might have been twins, had the orbit of one been just a tiny bit different. But rather than two clement Earths, there might have been two infernal Venuses. That鈥檚 a doubly humbling thought.
This article appeared in print under the headline 鈥淪eparated at birth鈥