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80beats

Posts Tagged ‘Kepler’

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Don’t Pack Your Bags Yet—New Planet-Finder Hobbled by Electronic Glitch

KeplerThe quest to find a second Earth–a potentially habitable planet that’s about the size of our home, but that lies in a distant solar system–has hit a snag. The Kepler space telescope was expected to be well on its way to detecting Earth-sized exoplanets by now, but an electronic glitch is slowing it down. The delays are caused by noisy amplifiers in the telescope’s electronics. The team is racing to fix the issue by changing the way data from the telescope is processed, but the delay could mean that ground-based observers now have the upper hand in the race to be the first to spot an Earth twin [Nature News].

Kepler, which was launched in March, uses the transit method to detect exoplanets; it’s watching a patch of 100,000 stars in hopes of detecting the brief dimming of a star’s light, which indicates that a planet has passed in front of the star. Kepler focuses light onto 42 light-detecting chips, called CCDs, each of which monitors stars in a different part of the telescope’s field of view. Each CCD is split into two for the purposes of sending data back to Earth, for a total of 84 data channels. Three of these channels are plagued by electronic noise that makes stars in their field of view appear to flicker – “like it’s changing its brightness at a rapid rate”, says Kepler chief scientist William Borucki [New Scientist]. That’s awkward, since the artificial flickers could obscure the real dimming that occurs during a planet’s transit.

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November 4th, 2009 Tags: exoplanets, Kepler, stars, telescopes
by Eliza Strickland in Space, Technology | 1 Comment » | RSS feed | Trackback >

NASA’s New Kepler Spacecraft Is Ready to Find Some Earths

EarthNASA’s Kepler spacecraft has only been in operation for 10 days, but it’s already spotted a planet, according to a report in Science. That leaves experts optimistic about the craft’s potential to find other Earth-like planets.

Scientists already knew that the planet Kepler found existed. It’s called HAT-P-7b, and it’s a planetary body that’s too heavy and too hot to support life. Still, Kepler gave scientists new details about the planet, including that the planet has a hazy, ozone-like atmosphere. The analysis proves that Kepler’s onboard telescope and light-detecting instruments are at least 100 times more precise than the ground-based detectors that originally found HAT-P-7b [L.A. Times], because Earth-based telescopes must wrestle with distortion from the atmosphere, while Kepler only looks through the clear near-vacuum of space.

Scientists say that Kepler’s capabilities should be sufficient to find Earth-like planets in the “habitable zone” of a star system–that is, the ring where temperatures climb high enough to allow liquid water to exist, but aren’t so scorching as to burn up the surface of the planet.

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August 7th, 2009 Tags: exoplanets, extraterrestrial life, Kepler, new planets, solar system
by Amos Zeeberg (Discover Web Editor) in Space | No Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Kepler Sends Postcards Home: It’s Beautiful Out Here

kepler_first_light1.jpgThe Kepler space telescope, which was launched in early March, has taken and sent home its first images of the region in the galaxy where it will spend the next three years searching for Earth-like planets.

The images sent to NASA show a “vast starry field” in the Cygnus-Lyra region of the Milky Way galaxy, according to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. One image shows millions of stars in the craft’s full field of view, while two other images zoom in specific sections of that region [Computerworld]. Kepler’s primary mission is to survey stars for regular slight dips in their brightness, a sign that an orbiting planet is blocking the star’s light [Nature blog]. Eventually, the craft will measure the stars’ brightness every half hour.

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April 17th, 2009 Tags: exoplanets, Kepler, new planets, solar system, space flight, stars, telescopes
by Amos Zeeberg (Discover Web Editor) in Space | 8 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

After a Flawless Launch, Kepler Telescope Gets Ready for Planet Hunting

Kepler launchOn Friday night, a Delta 2 rocket blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center and roared into space carrying a satellite that will search the heavens for Earth-like planets. The craft, Kepler, named after the German astronomer Johannes Kepler, who discovered the planetary laws of motion, is to spend the next three and a half years in an orbit around the Sun, where it will count planets by looking for the tiny blips in starlight caused by planets eclipsing their suns [The New York Times].

The $600 million satellite will stare into a region of the Milky Way that’s thick with stars, in the direction of the constellations Cygnus and Lyra. While Kepler is expected to identify many new planets beyond our solar system, known as exoplanets, the real prize would be to find rocky planets in the “habitable zone” around a star, where conditions might be right for life as we know it. “The habitable zone is where we think water will be,” Bill Borucki, Kepler principal investigator at NASA Ames, says in a video on the space agency’s Kepler site. “If you can find liquid water on the surface we think we may very well find life there. So that zone is not too close to the star, because it’s too hot and water boils, and not too far away where the water is condensed…a planet covered with glaciers. It’s the Goldilocks zone–not too hot, not too cold, just right for life” [CNET].

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March 9th, 2009 Tags: exoplanets, extraterrestrial life, Kepler, Milky Way, NASA, new planets, telescopes
by Eliza Strickland in Space | 5 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

New Telescope Could Reveal a Milky Way Packed With Habitable Planets

exoplanet earth-likeWhile astronomers have found more than 300 planets beyond our solar system in the last 15 years, none of those “exoplanets” has been a likely candidate for extraterrestrial life. The exoplanets discovered thus far are all either too close to the hot sun or too far away and therefore too frigid to host life as we know it. But Alan Boss says it’s just a matter of time before we find Earth-like planets in the “Goldilocks zone”: he calculates that 100 billion of them may exist within our own Milky Way galaxy. And NASA’s Kepler satellite, which is expected to launch on March 5, may be the key to finding them, he says.

Boss, an astrophysicist and author of the new book “The Crowded Universe: The Search for Living Planets,” says that if any of the billions of Earth-like worlds he believes exist in the Milky Way have liquid water, they are likely to be home to some type of life. “Now that’s not saying that they’re all going to be crawling with intelligent human beings or even dinosaurs,” he said. “But I would suspect that the great majority of them at least will have some sort of primitive life, like bacteria or some of the multicellular creatures that populated our Earth for the first 3 billion years of its existence” [CNN].

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February 26th, 2009 Tags: Corot, exoplanets, extraterrestrial life, Kepler, Milky Way, NASA, new planets, telescopes
by Eliza Strickland in Space | 12 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

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      80beats is DISCOVER's news aggregator, weaving together the choicest tidbits from the best articles on the day's most compelling topics.

      80beats is written by Veronique Greenwood and Valerie Ross. This team darts through each day's science news faster than the ruby-throated hummingbird that beats its wings 80 times per second. Send ideas, tips, suggestions, and complaints to [azeeberg at discovermagazine dot com].



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