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NASA's Kepler Mission is to continue. Image: NASA
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Good news for alien hunters. NASA’s
Kepler Mission has been approved for extension through fiscal year 2016 based on a recommendation from
the agency’s Senior Review of its operating missions.
The extension provides four additional years to find Earth-size
planets in the habitable zone – the region in a planetary system where
liquid water could exist on the surface of an orbiting planet – around
sun-like stars in our galaxy.
“Kepler has revolutionized our understanding of exoplanets and the
study of stellar seismology and variability,” said Roger Hunter, Kepler
project manager at NASA’s Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
“There is currently no other mission in development that can replace or
surpass the precision of Kepler. This extended mission will afford
Kepler a unique opportunity to rewrite our understanding of the galaxy
and our place in it.”
Launched in March 2009, the Kepler spacecraft identifies planet
candidates by repeatedly measuring the tiny change in brightness of more
than 150,000 stars to detect when a planet transits the face of the
star. The size of the planet can be derived from these periodic dips in
brightness. At least three transits are required to verify a signal as a
planet.
“Kepler offers a new technical capability, opening a new measurement
parameter space, and as often happens with such developments, that has
led to unexpected results. There has been a continuous stream of new
findings – the assimilation and exploitation of new opportunities is
just beginning,” as stated by the committee in the 2012 Senior Review
report.
The mission’s discoveries beyond our solar system include the first
unquestionably rocky planet; the first multiple-transiting planet
system; the first small planet in the habitable zone; the first
Earth-size planets; the smallest Mars-size planets; and the confirmation
of a new class of double-star planetary systems.
Ames Research Center manages Kepler’s ground system development,
mission operations and science data analysis. NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Pasadena, California, managed the Kepler mission’s
development.
Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp.
in Boulder, Colorado, developed the Kepler flight system and supports
mission operations with the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics
at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
The Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore archives, hosts and distributes Kepler science data.
Kepler is NASA’s 10th Discovery Mission and is funded by NASA’s
Science Mission Directorate at the agency’s headquarters in Washington.
• The Review report is available at: https://science.nasa.gov/astrophysics/2012-senior-review
• For more information about the Kepler mission, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/kepler