"Search for Earth's Twin" --Is the End of the Kepler Mission Imminent?
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October 28, 2011

"Search for Earth's Twin" --Is the End of the Kepler Mission Imminent?

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Is the USA walking away from a mission that hopes to answer one the the truly great questions of the 21st Century: Are we alone in the Universe?

According to widespread rumor, word has leaked out that the Obama administration intends to terminate NASA’s planetary exploration program. The Mars Science Lab Curiosity, being readied on the pad, will be launched, as will the nearly completed small MAVEN orbiter scheduled for 2013, but that the now-orbiting Kepler Telescope will be turned off in midmission, stopping it before it can complete its goal of finding potential twin Earths.

The Kepler space telescope has uncovered 140 candidate planets the size of Earth circling other stars, potentially reshaping our view of the universe. Launched in March 2009, Kepler's sensitive camera stares at a field of stars in the constellations Cygnus and Lyra. The telescope looks for tiny dips in each star's brightness, a sign something is passing between the star and the Kepler spacecraft.

Harvard's Dimitar Sasselov noted the targets were just candidates, but he said the data points to an exciting possibility. "The statistical result is loud and clear," Sasselov said. "And the statistical result is that planet like our own Earth are out there. Our own Milky Way galaxy is rich in these kind of planets."

After 2013, America’s amazing career of planetary exploration, which ran from the Mariner probes in the 1960s through the great Pioneer, Viking, Voyager, Pathfinder, MarsGlobalSurveyor, MarsOdyssey, Spirit, Opportunity, MarsReconnaissanceOrbiter, Galileo and Cassini missions, will come to an end.

Additionally, the plan from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) also leaves Hubbles successor, the Webb Telescope, the agency’s flagship, which promises fundamental breakthroughs in our understanding of the laws of the universe, not sufficiently funded to allow successful completion.

Kepler has so far found five extrasolar planets, all of which are massive "hot Jupiters" about the size of the gas giant planets in our own solar system. NASA scientists hope to announce more planets this winter, according to William Borucki, Principal Investigator at NASA Ames Research Center.

Before the mission launched, Kepler officials advertised finding at least 50 Earth-sized planets inside habitable zones, assuming such worlds are common.

Scientists released Kepler data on more than 150,000 stars in June, including about 300 stars with planetary candidates. Kepler officials retained data on approximately 400 stars to do their own follow-up observations with ground telescopes this summer.

"We found a lot of candidates," Borucki said. "Many of them are smaller than Neptune-sized, and that's wonderful."

The data only covers 43 days of observations because it takes about four months to process observations into usable formats.

The Daily Galaxy via washingtontimes.com and spaceflightnow.com

Comments

If the Washington Times says something about a Democrat, you should check other sources before repeating it... there might be a Kernel of truth in such a story, or maybe not. In this case, it looks like not. Kepler, and all such missions are still going forward.

I have no idea what I am doing, but I sure am getting it done. Piece by little tiny piece. - Nice quote, since I often feel the same thing. I do not know what I am doing, but I sure am getting it done. Is that wrong having such attitude in life? Or should I change it? But, how to do it? Anybody can share with me, how to do it? Or, what should I do? I'm totally lost.

This rumor has been discredited by NASA already.

Dear dolce&gabbana pull:
Yea, I can help.
Get a job!

Funny how the article goes from "widespread rumor" in the second paragraph to a very definite "will end" in the fourth.

And, of course, there's Riz' point that NASA has already discredited the story (though a URL would be helpful).

That adds up to irresponsible reporting.

The rumor is not widespread if it only comes from one source who refuses to give any evidence of his claim or where he got his info.

I find most of the info given in this post at least 1 year old! For instance the number of candidate planets... It seems to me that who wrote the article has used pieces of info from old posts to build a story on rumors and no content at all. !

I find most of the info given in this post at least 1 year old! For instance the number of candidate planets... It seems to me that who wrote the article has used pieces of info from old posts to build a story on rumors and no content at all. !

no one is that stupid.

Ipanice - You'd be surprised!

That has to be worst written article I have ever read. The information was cool (If I understood it). But it looked like intellectually delayed middle school student wrote it.

That has to be worst written article I have ever read. The information was cool (If I understood it). But it looked like intellectually delayed middle school student wrote it.

I find most of the info given in this post at least 1 year old! For instance the number of candidate planets... It seems to me that who wrote the article has used pieces of info from old posts to build a story on rumors and no content at all. !

J’ai eu un vrai coup de cœur pour ce film: les acteurs, le scénario, la musique… Hormis l’histoire, c’est une des premières fois que j’ai l’impression d’entrer dans la tête de « vrais » enfants (qui, dans les films, ont tendance à être représentés comme des bambins « pause nutella » ou alors aussi sympas que la poupée chucky…). C’est fin et plein de poésie et en cela, ça s’accorde vraiment bien à un récit sur l’enfance.
Mention spéciale au zizi « home made » qui m’a vraiment fait rire!


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