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NASA Kepler News
01-07-2013
Announcing 461 New Kepler Planet Candidates
At a press conference at the American Astronomical Society Meeting in Long Beach CA, Chris Burke announced new results from the Kepler Mission, including 461 new planet candidates. Francois Fressin presented "At Least One in Six Stars Has an Earth-size Planet"
11-27-2012
Kepler Participating Scientist Program Announcement
The Kepler Participating Scientist Program (PSP), designed to fund community investigations that advance the goals of the Kepler Mission during its extended phase, notices of intent are requested by January 18, 2013, and the due date for proposals is March 1, 2013.
11-14-2012
Kepler Completes Prime Mission and Begins Extended Mission
Today Kepler Space Telescope marks two milestones: the successful completion of its prime mission searching for exoplanets and the beginning of an extended mission that we expect to last at least four years, unfolding a census of exoplanets, the ones of greatest interest being other Earths that could already be in the data, awaiting analysis. Kepler's most exciting results are yet to come.
10-18-2012
Revisiting exoplanet TrES-2 (Kepler-1b)
A study of exoplanet TrES-2 using 2.7 years of observations by the Kepler spacecraft yield very precise measurements of the host star's size, thus pinpointing the planet's size with unprecedented accuracy.
10-16-2012
Planet Hunters Find Circumbinary Planet in 4-Star System
Planet Hunter volunteers, Kian Jek of San Francisco, Calif., and Robert Gagliano of Cottonwood, Ariz., have helped discover an alien planet with two suns. But this circumbinary system is in turn orbited by two more stars — a star-planet system that is the first of its kind known.
08-28-2012
Kepler-47: Our First Binary Star 2-Planet System
Kepler mission has discovered Kepler-47b and 47c, the first transiting circumbinary system — multiple planets orbiting two suns. Moreover, Kepler-47c is in the binary system's habitable zone (where liquid water may exist).
08-23-2012
The Transit Timing Variation (TTV) Planet-finding Technique Begins to Flower
The Transit Timing Variation (TTV) method of planet-finding, first used to discover Kepler-9d (Science online 26 August 2010), is really flowering with submission of two independent papers, currently under scientific peer-review, confirming a total of 41 new transiting planets in 20 multiple planet systems in the Kepler field of view.
08-13-2012
Kepler: The Long Road to Other Worlds
An article by Kerry Ellis for NASA ASK Magazine, Issue #47, Summer 2012. It took nearly 20 years of persistence and ingenuity to prove that Kepler could find exoplanets. Now, with an extended mission to 2016, Kepler's results will be important in guiding the next generation of exoplanet missions. William Borucki, Kepler principal investigator at Ames, shares the journey of proving his idea of high-precision transit photometry to search for other worlds today.
07-28-2012
Kepler Team receives the Vision to Reality Award
Kepler Team receives from Space Frontier Foundation the Vision to Reality Award for outstanding achievement in the development and operation of a device, system or entity that forwards the opening of the Space Frontier..
07-25-2012
A far-off solar system
Researchers measure the orientation of a multiplanet system and find it very similar to our own solar system.
07-09-2012
Kepler Science Team to Receive ASP Maria & Eric Muhlman Award
Kepler Principal Investigator William Borucki and the Kepler Science Team are the Astronomical Society of the Pacific's choice for the 2012 Maria & Eric Muhlman Award "for recent significant observational results made possible by innovative advances in astronomical instrumentation, software, or observational infrastructure."
06-21-2012
Alien World Looms Large in its Neighbor World's Sky
Kepler Mission astronomers discovered a star, Kepler-36, with two planets orbiting closer to each other than any other pair of planets in any planetary system found to date. But they are strikingly different types of planets.
06-19-2012
NASA'S Pleiades Supercomputer Gets A Little More Oomph
NASA's flagship Pleiades supercomputer just received a boost to help keep pace with the intensive number-crunching requirements of scientists and engineers working on some of the agency's most challenging missions, including processing massive amounts of star data gathered from NASA's Kepler spacecraft, leading to the discovery of new Earth-sized planets in the Milky Way galaxy.
06-13-2012
Small planets do not need metal-rich stars
A research team led by Lars A. Buchhave has studied the elemental composition of more than 150 Kepler stars harboring 226 Kepler planet candidates smaller than Neptune and found that the occurrence of small planets does not depend as strongly on the metallicity of the host star. This observation suggests that terrestrial-like planets may be widespread in the disk of our Galaxy, with no special requirement of higher metallicity stars for their formation.
06-07-2012
AAS Student Virtual Forum: remotely attend the "Exoplanet Census from Kepler" session
American Astronomical Society (AAS) will hold it's first experimental online oral session at the 220th AAS meeting in Anchorage, Alaska. This allows for attendees from remote locations via the Internet to the Meeting-in-a-Meeting session 306, entitled "Exoplanet Census from Kepler," on Tuesday, June 12th, from 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
05-10-2012
A Study of 63 Hot Jupiter Systems
A study of 63 hot Jupiter systems, planetary systems with Jupiter-size planet candidates in three day orbits found no evidence of small, companion candidates, suggesting that small candidates were ejected from the system, leaving large planets to later circularize into tight orbits.
04-24-2012
Earth-based Observations Lead to Planet Candidates in Habitable Zones
A paper by P. Muirhead et al submitted to The Astrophysical Journal reports new stellar parameters of 84 cooler late-K and M-type stars in the Kepler Input Catalog. New stellar radii and temperatures obtained through observations using the 200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory has resulted in new orbit sizes for three super Earth-size planet candidates that place them the habitable zones of the respective host stars.
04-04-2012
NASA Approves Kepler Mission Extension
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.
03-22-2012
The Ones Have It
Not only did the Kepler Launch Clock recently reach the 1000 days milestone, it reached the 1111:11:11:11 milestone.
02-28-2012
1,091 New Kepler Planet Candidates
The NASA Kepler mission has made public 1,091 new planet candidates, bringing the total Kepler planet candidate count now to 2,321. Details are contained in an Astrophysical Journal article.
02-15-2012
Black History Month Feature: Discussion With John Johnson
As part of Black History Month, John Johnson, scientist at NASA’s Exoplanet Science Institute at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, discussed his research and recent discoveries, and the path that led him to the work he's doing today.
01-26-2012
NASA's Kepler announces 11 planetary systems hosting 26 planets
This nearly doubles the number of verified planets and triples the number of stars known to have multiple transiting planets. Most were confirmed Transit Timing Variations (TTVs) without the need for ground based observations, but discoveries in Kepler-33 system are by a very exciting new statistical method of confirming planets in multi-planet systems.
01-11-2012
KOI-961: A Mini-Planetary System
Astronomers using data from NASA's Kepler mission have discovered the three smallest planets yet detected orbiting a star beyond our sun. The planets orbit a single star, called KOI-961, and are 0.78, 0.73 and 0.57 times the radius of Earth. The smallest is about the size of Mars.
12-20-2011
Kepler-20 system: 5 planets including two that are Earth-size
The Kepler mission discovered the smallest transiting planets yet found around a star beyond our own. The system is jam-packed with five planets, all circling within a distance roughly equivalent to Mercury's orbit in our solar system. One is almost exactly Earth-size and one is even less—about 7/8 Earth size.
12-05-2011
Kepler-22b, our first planet in the habitable zone of a Sun-like Star
The Kepler team has discovered Kepler-22b, a planet 2.4 times the size of Earth that orbits a sun-like star in 289 days. It the smallest planet yet found to orbit in the middle of its star's habitable zone, which is the region around a star where temperatures are just right for liquid water, a key ingredient for life.
11-30-2011
Kepler-21b discovery
Kepler Deputy Project Scientist Steve Howell led a research team in discovering that one of the brightest stars in the Kepler star field has a 1.6 Earth-radius planet circling its parent star with a 2.8 day period. With such a short period, and only about 6 million km away from its parent star Kepler 21b is a toasty 1900 K, or 2960 F.
11-04-2011
Discovery of Kepler-17b
This is a hot Jupiter-class planet orbiting an active star, with dark spots that are frequently occulted by the planet. From this we find the star rotates in about 12 days, only 8 times the the planet’s orbital period.
10-04-2011
Discovery of Kepler-18b, c, and d
A team of Kepler researchers led by Bill Cochran of The University of Texas at Austin has announced the discovery three planets: a super-Earth and two Neptune-sized planets. Kepler-18b is "validated" (by ruling out other possibilities that might masquerade as a planet) , while c and d are "verified" thanks to analysis of their gravitational interactions.
09-15-2011
NASA’s Kepler Mission Discovers a World Orbiting Two Stars
The existence of a world with a double sunset, as portrayed in the film Star Wars more than 30 years ago, is now scientific fact. NASA's Kepler mission has made the first unambiguous detection of a circumbinary planet -- a planet orbiting two stars -- 200 light-years from Earth.
09-14-2011
The turbulent lives of stars
The stars are boiling! The reason is the energy generated in the center of the star that wants to escape. If this does not happen quickly enough, the star starts to ‘boil’ in the outer layers causing vibrations that result in light variations, like in the Sun. Such oscillations have now been discovered by Victoria Antoci and collaborators using the NASA spacecraft Kepler, but in a much hotter star. The scientists publish this in the most recent issue of “Nature”.
09-13-2011
NASA to Announce Kepler Discovery at Media Briefing
MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. -- NASA will host a news briefing at 11 a.m. PDT, Thursday, Sept. 15, to announce a new discovery by the Kepler mission. The briefing will be held ...at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. The event will be carried live on NASA Television and the agency’s website at http://www.nasa.gov/ntv.
09-08-2011
Invisible World Discovered
Kepler planet discoveries: Kepler-19b, transits its star every 9 days and 7 hours. It orbits the star at a distance of 8.4 million miles, where it is heated to a temperature of about 900 degrees Fahrenheit. Kepler-19b has a diameter of 18,000 miles, making it slightly more than twice the size of Earth….
Kepler-19c—discovered because Kepler -19b alternately runs late and early in its orbit due to Kepler-19c tugging on it—could be a rocky planet on a circular 5-day orbit, or a gas-giant planet on an oblong 100-day orbit....
08-12-2011
NASA’s Kepler Mission Announces Next Data Release to Public Archive
The next release of Kepler data to the public archive (quarter three science data collected from September to December 2009) will be available for download on Sept. 23, 2011 from the Multimission Archive at STScI (MAST).
The team recognizes a strong demand from the scientific community for Kepler data, as evidenced by the number of papers on exoplanet science as well as stellar astrophysics that have been published using Kepler data.
08-11-2011
Alien World is Blacker than Coal
A Press Release from Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, MA announcing that astronomers have discovered the darkest known exoplanet: Jupiter-sized gas giant known as TrES-2b that reflects less than one percent of the sunlight falling on it, making it blacker than coal or any planet or moon in our solar system.
07-25-2011
Gemini Image Captures Elegant Beauty of Planetary Nebula Discovered by Amateur Astronomer
… the new nebula (named Kronberger 61, or Kn 61, after its discoverer) is within a relatively small patch of sky being intensely monitored by NASA’s Kepler planet finding mission. … professional and amateur astronomers are working as partners to comb through the entire Kepler field looking for planetary nebula candidates. To date six have been found including this one by Kronberger, a member of the amateur group called the “Deep Sky Hunters.” The group, dedicated to finding new objects in our galaxy and beyond, has found two planetary nebulae in the Kepler field so far (including Kn 61) and a possible third, which, according to Jacoby, “…are extremely rare and each, a valuable gem.” …“Planetary nebulae present a profound mystery” ….
07-20-2011
Kepler-14b, Supergiant, is orbiting one of the stars in a binary star system
Kepler-14b is a planet 8 times more massive than Jupiter, orbiting one of
the stars in a binary star system. The planet has a short orbital period of
just 7 days, while the two stars orbit each other with a much longer period
of about 2800 years. The light from the planet hosting star diluted by
its companion star significantly affects the derived
planetary parameters... and similar dilution effect could significantly affect the derived
planetary parameters of other planet discoveries.
07-04-2011
Hubble Space Telescope's One Millionth Science Observation is of Kepler-2b
Monday, July 4, the NASA's Hubble Space Telescope logged its one millionth science observation — a search for water in an exoplanet's atmosphere 1,000 light-years away. Hubble's millionth exposure is of the planet HAT-P-7b, a gas giant planet larger than Jupiter orbiting a star hotter than our sun. HAT-P-7b, also known as Kepler 2b, has been studied by NASA's planet-hunting Kepler observatory after it was discovered by ground-based observations. Full Release at Hubblesite
06-20-2011
NASA's Pleiades Supercomputer Ranks Among World's Fastest
The Pleiades supercomputer plays a crucial role in Kepler data analysis.
...Pleiades now contains 23,296 Intel(R) Xeon(R) quad- and hex-core processors (111,104 cores in 182 racks) that can run at a theoretical peak of approximately 1.32 quadrillion floating point operations, or calculations, per second. It achieved an official sustained rate of 1.09 petaflop per second....
05-25-2011
NASA’s Kepler Yields the Next Harvest: A bounty of findings delivered at the 218th Meeting of the AAS in Boston
The Kepler Team had 50 presentations at the 218th meeting of the American Astronomical Society (AAS) in Boston, 2011 May 22-26. On May 23, Day 808 of the mission, an AAS press conference included short presentations by five Kepler team panelists: Kepler PI William Borucki, (Introduction), David Latham (on multi-planet systems), Francois Fressin (on Kepler-10c and a new technique for validating planets), Geoff Marcy (with statistical analysis to determine prevalence of various types of planets), and Søren Meibom (on determining a star’s age from its rotation speed).
05-23-2011
Kepler-10c and a New Method to Validate Planets
Kepler has discovered a second planet in the Kepler-10 star system: Kepler-10c with a radius of 2.2 times that of Earth's, and it orbits the star every 45 days. Even more important, the discovery of Kepler-10c was a accomplished with a new method of validating planet discoveries—a method called "Blender."
05-23-2011
Kepler’s Astounding Haul of Multiple Planet Systems
Within just the first four months of NASA’s Kepler spacecraft data collection, astronomers have found evidence for more than 1,200 planetary candidates. Of those, 408 reside in systems containing two or more planets, and most of those look very different than our solar system. David Latham of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics presented findings today in a press conference at the 218th meeting of the American Astronomical Society.
05-23-2011
How to Learn a Star’s True Age
For many movie stars, their age is a well-kept secret. The same is true of stars in space. Like our Sun, most stars look almost the same for most of their lives. So how can we tell if a star is one billion or 10 billion years old? Astronomers may have found a solution – measuring the star’s spin. Søren Meibom of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics presented findings today in a press conference at the 218th meeting of the American Astronomical Society.
04-07-2011
Kepler discovery of a unique triply eclipsing triple star
Star HD 181068 , a 7th magnitude star almost visible to the naked eye is in reality a complex triple system in which three stars undergo mutual eclipses as each of the stars gets behind or in front of the others. The most luminous object is a red giant star around which a close pair of two red dwarfs orbits with a period of 45.5 days. The combined light from the three stars show sharp brightness decreases with a period of 0.9 days produced by the mutual eclipses of the close pair of dwarfs, while it takes 2 days for the close pair to pass in front of or behind the red giant. See also NASA Kepler Feature story: NASA Kepler Reaching into the Stars.
04-07-2011
Kepler Listens to an Orchestra of Solar-Type Stars
An international team of asteroseismologists, led by the University of Birmingham, has used data from the NASA Kepler Mission to sample the ‘stellar music’ of 500 stars similar to the Sun, according to research published today (8 April 2011) in the journal Science. The team used the information from these natural resonances, which is coded in pulses of starlight, to measure the properties of these stars and will now be able to compare their findings with predictions based on models of the Milky Way galaxy. ...Dr Bill Chaplin from the University of Birmingham’s School of Physics and Astronomy, who leads the international collaboration, said, ... 'Thanks to the Kepler Mission we can measure and weigh the stars and look at the range of sizes and masses.' See also NASA Kepler Feature story: NASA Kepler Reaching into the Stars.
03-30-2011
Giant stars reveal their inner secrets for the first time
University of Sydney astrophysicists are behind a major breakthrough in the study of stars known as red giants, finding a way to peer deep into their cores to discover which ones are in early infancy, which are fresh-faced teenagers, and which facing their dying days.
The discovery, published in the latest edition of the journal Nature and made possible by observations using NASA's powerful Kepler space telescope, is shedding new light on the evolution of stars, including our own sun.
03-17-2011
Astronomers detect echoes from the depth of a red giant star
Today an international team of astronomers reports the discovery of waves inside a star that travel so deep that they reach the core. The discovery …was possible thanks to precise measurements with the Kepler space telescope. …up to now only waves in the outer part of the star were observed. ...says Hans Kjeldsen of Aarhus university, the coordinator of Kepler Asterosiesmic Science Consortium (KASC). "The measurements provided by Kepler are so incredibly precise that we see things we never saw before. It's like traveling in a whole new world"
02-11-2011
A tweet-up with NASA Kepler and Ames Research Center
56 "tweeps" were treated to a Tweet-up at NASA Ames Research Center, including visits with Kepler mission team members. About half the tweeps were local, but the other half were from 18 states and 5 countries. And they all LOVED Tweet-up! This news item has links to media coverage, posts by the the tweeps, and a selection of tweets from the event.
02-01-2011
NASA Announces 1,235 Planet Candidates, Some in Habitable Zone, and a 6-Planet System
NASA's Kepler mission has discovered its first Earth-size planet candidates and its first candidates in the habitable zone, a region where liquid water could exist on a planet's surface. Five are both near Earth-size and orbit in the habitable zone of their stars. The discoveries are part of several hundred new planet candidates identified in new Kepler mission science data, released on Tuesday, Feb. 1. The findings increase the number of planet candidates identified by Kepler to-date to 1,235. 170 stars show evidence of multiple planetary candidates. Kepler-11 has the most confirmed transiting planets ever discovered and all six of its planets have orbits smaller than Venus, and five of the six have orbits smaller than Mercury's.
01-27-2011
NASA To Announce New Planetary Discoveries
NASA will host a news briefing at 1 p.m. EST, Wednesday, Feb. 2, to announce the Kepler mission's latest findings about planets outside our solar system. The briefing will be carried live on NASA Television and the agency's website at http://www.nasa.gov/ntv. The news conference will follow the scheduled release of Kepler mission science data on Feb. 1, and update the number of planet candidates based on observations conducted between May 2 and Sept. 17, 2009. Presenters are: Douglas Hudgins, (Kepler program scientist, NASA Headquarters), William Borucki (Kepler Science principal investigator), Jack Lissauer, Kepler co-investigator and planetary scientist, Debra Fischer (Professor of Astronomy, Yale University). Reporters also may ask questions from participating NASA field centers or by phone. To obtain dial-in information, journalists must send their name, affiliation and telephone number to Steve Cole by e-mail
at stephen.e.cole@nasa.gov by noon EST on Feb. 1.
01-09-2011
NASA Chat with Kepler Scientist, Natalie Batalha
A new planet discovery will be announced Monday Jan. 10 during the 'Exoplanets & Their Host Stars' presentation at the American Astronomical Society (AAS) conference in Seattle, Washington. Natalie Batalha of the NASA Kepler Mission Team will be online answering your questions about this new planet finding on Monday, Jan. 10 from 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. EST / 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. PST. Natalie will be chatting with you live from the conference in Seattle.
Joining the chat is easy. Simply visit this page:
NASA Chat: The Quest for Planets
on Monday from 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. EST / 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. PST.
11-10-2010
Announcement of Earlier Kepler Data Release—from June 2011 to 1 February 2011
From AAS Electronic Announcement #214 – November 2010
The Kepler project wishes to inform the community that it is moving
the next data release date (originally planned for June 2011) forward
to 1 February 2011. This data set (Quarter 2) is the first consisting
of a complete 3 months of observations. It will contain light curves
for approximately 165,000 stars (most of which are late-type Main
Sequence stars) brighter than 16th magnitude in the Cygnus & Lyra
constellations sampled at a 30-minute cadence. Three subsets of
one-month each of [up to 512] stars were sampled at 1 min cadence. The shorter
cadence data will be released on the same schedule.
11-05-2010
Beth Sholes Honored by Society of Women Engineers with Resnik Challenger Medal
Principal Propulsion Engineer Beth Sholes at Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. has won the prestigious Resnik Challenger Medal. The award recognized Sholes for her propulsion analysis and design on several unique missions including the Kepler Space Telescope. Sholes designed a propulsion system that maintains Kepler’s stability and pointing accuracy, necessary for its job of constantly observing 100,000 stars.
10-14-2010
2010 Sagan Day Essay Contest
Sponsored by NASA's Kepler Mission and SETI Institute --||-- Deadline: October 26, 2010 --||-- Awards Announced: November 9, 2010 --||-- Must be 18 years or older --||-- Essay must: be < 1000 words
10-04-2010
RELEASE 10-245: NASA's Kepler Mission wins 2010 software of the year award.
“Kepler Science Operations Center” software has won the NASA Software of the Year Award for 2010. In addition to a monetary award, each member of the team will be receiving a Software of the Year medallion after the Software of the Year awards ceremony to be held at the NASA Project Management Challenge on February 9th or 10th, 2011 at the Long Beach Convention Center in Long Beach, California.
10-01-2010
Kepler Mission Research Paper Honored by Thomson Reuters
A Kepler Mission research paper written to serve as “the standard reference for the mission,” has been determined by Thomson Reuters Essential Science Indicators (SM) to be the most-cited paper in Space Science and in Emerging Research Front for October 2010. Authored by David Koch, Kepler Mission deputy principal investigator, along with a host of co-authors, “Kepler Mission Design, Realized Photometric Performance, and Early Science” provides an overview of the mission designed to find Earth-size planets in the habitable zone (where liquid water could exist) of solar-like stars.
10-01-2010
Kepler-9: A System of Multiple Planets Transiting a Sun-Like Star, Confirmed by Timing Variations
Article in Science 1 October 2010: 51-54. Published online 26 August 2010 [DOI: 10.1126/science.1195778] (in Science Express Research Articles). Two Saturn-size planets show variations in the times they take to transit their star due to gravitational interaction.
Authors: Matthew J. Holman, Daniel C. Fabrycky, Darin Ragozzine, Eric B. Ford, Jason H. Steffen, William F. Welsh, Jack J. Lissauer, David W. Latham, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Lucianne M. Walkowicz, Natalie M. Batalha, Jon M. Jenkins, Jason F. Rowe, William D. Cochran, Francois Fressin, Guillermo Torres, Lars A. Buchhave, Dimitar D. Sasselov, William J. Borucki, David G. Koch, Gibor Basri, Timothy M. Brown, Douglas A. Caldwell, David Charbonneau, Edward W. Dunham, Thomas N. Gautier, III, John C. Geary, Ronald L. Gilliland, Michael R. Haas, Steve B. Howell, David R. Ciardi, Michael Endl, Debra Fischer, Gábor Fürész, Joel D. Hartman, Howard Isaacson, John A. Johnson, Phillip J. MacQueen, Althea V. Moorhead, Robert C. Morehead, and Jerome A. Orosz
08-26-2010
Kepler Discovers Two Planets Transiting Same Star
NASA RELEASE : 10-197
MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. -- NASA's Kepler spacecraft has discovered the first confirmed planetary system with more than one planet crossing in front of, or transiting, the same star.
The transit signatures of two distinct planets were seen in the data for the sun-like star designated Kepler-9. The planets were named Kepler-9b and 9c. The discovery incorporates seven months of observations of more than 156,000 stars as part of an ongoing search for Earth-sized planets outside our solar system. The findings will be published in Thursday's issue of the journal Science.
See full NASA release
08-23-2010
Press Conference for LATEST FINDINGS by Kepler
MEDIA ADVISORY: M10-120 WASHINGTON -- NASA will hold a media teleconference Thursday, Aug. 26, at 1 p.m. EDT to discuss the Kepler spacecraft's latest discovery about an intriguing planetary system. ...In June, mission scientists a announced the mission has identified more than 700 planet candidates, including five candidate systems that appear to have more than one transiting planet.
To participate in the teleconference, reporters [ONLY] should e-mail J.D. Harrington at by 11 a.m. EDT, Thursday, Aug. 26. See http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2010/aug/HQ_M10-120_Kepler_Telecon.html
[For General Public:] Audio of the teleconference will be streamed live at: http://www.nasa.gov/newsaudio
06-16-2010
Deluge of Data
Kepler releases info on exoplanet candidates
06-15-2010
First 43 Days of Kepler Data Released
NASA's Kepler Mission has released 43 days of science data consisting of brightness changes for more than 156,000 stars originally targeted in an ongoing search for Earth-like planets outside of our solar system. Astronomers will use the new data to determine if orbiting planets are responsible for brightness variations in several hundred stars. …Some show starspots, which are similar to sunspots, and a few produce flares that would sterilize their nearest planets. …The 28-member Kepler science team also is performing follow-up observations on a specific set of 400 objects of interest. …That data will be released to the scientific community in February 2011. ..."This is the most precise, nearly continuous, longest and largest data set of stellar photometry ever," said Kepler Deputy Principal Investigator David Koch of NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. "The results will only get better as the duration of the data set grows with time."
Kepler will continue conducting science operations until at least November 2012, searching for planets as small as Earth, including those that orbit stars in a warm habitable zone where liquid water could exist on the surface of the planet. Since transits of planets in the habitable zone of solar-like stars occur about once a year and require three transits for verification, it is expected to take at least three years to locate and verify an Earth-size planet. "The Kepler observations will tell us whether there are many stars with planets that could harbor life, or whether we might be alone in our galaxy," said mission science principal investigator William Borucki of Ames.
To see the released science data, visit the Multimission Archive at STScI (MAST): http://archive.stsci.edu/kepler
04-13-2010
Kepler Website Honored
The Kepler website has been selected as an Official 2010 Webbie Award Honoree.
03-04-2010
Kepler One Year Anniversary
One year ago this week, NASA’s Kepler Mission soared into the dark night sky, leaving a bright glow in its wake as it began its search for other worlds like Earth.
01-04-2010
The First Five
NASA's Kepler space telescope, designed to find Earth-size planets in the habitable zone of sun-like stars, has discovered its first five new exoplanets, or planets beyond our solar system.
Kepler's high sensitivity to both small and large planets enabled the discovery of the exoplanets, named Kepler 4b, 5b, 6b, 7b and 8b. The discoveries were announced Monday, Jan. 4, by the members of the Kepler science team during a news briefing at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Washington.
12-31-2009
The Big Reveal
MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. - Kepler Mission scientists will reveal the space telescope's latest discoveries at a news briefing in Washington on Monday, Jan. 4, 2010.
The announcement will be made at 10 a.m. PST (1 p.m. EST) at a news conference during the 215th national meeting of the American Astronomical Society (AAS) at the Washington Marriott Wardman Park hotel.
11-23-2009
Kepler experienced a safe mode event on November 18
Kepler experienced a safe mode event on November 18. A safe mode is a self-protective measure that the spacecraft takes when something unexpected occurs. During safe mode, the spacecraft points the solar panels directly at the sun and begins to slowly rotate about a sun-aligned axis. The spacecraft automatically powered off the photometer and one redundant subsystem as a safety precaution. Engineers immediately began telemetry analysis to determine spacecraft subsystem health, and root cause determination of what triggered the safe mode. This safe mode occurred when the team was preparing to download another month of scientific data from Kepler. The scientific data was not in danger and was downloaded successfully via the NASA Deep Space Network on November 19. Engineers verified nominal performance of all of Keplers systems and successfully recovered the vehicle from safe mode. Science data collection was resumed by the evening of November 20.
11-06-2009
Kepler's Search for Small Worlds Hampered by Noisy Electronics.
By Debra Werner, Space News. Excerpt: MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. ... In spite of electronic components that are creating extraneous noise on board the Kepler space telescope, NASA officials are confident the mission will be able by 2011 to either detect Earth-size planets or reveal that those planets are uncommon, said James Fanson, Kepler project manager at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. During an Oct. 29 meeting here, William Borucki, Kepler principal investigator at the NASA Ames Research Center, told members of the NASA Advisory Council that noise produced by three of the 42 amplifiers used to boost signals from the telescopes charge-coupled devices was creating image artifacts, or features present in the Kepler data sets that reflect noise rather than an accurate picture of the stars. "Those image artifacts are slowing our data analysis," Borucki told the panel. "Mitigation work to flag and correct those problems will be complete in 2011."
That does not mean, however, that Kepler will be unable to discover Earth-size planets before 2011, Fanson told Space News Nov. 5. Data obtained last summer ... indicated that the instrument is sensitive enough to detect far smaller objects, including planets the size of Earth. …"Kepler measurements are at least 100 times more sensitive than measurements obtained from telescopes on Earth," he said. The quality of the light curve is so extraordinary, in fact, that one mission official wept with joy when he saw the data, Fanson added….
08-06-2009
First Phase
NASA'S Kepler Mission Spies Changing Phases in a Distant World
08-03-2009
NASA Announces Briefing About Kepler's Early Science Results
WASHINGTON -- NASA will hold a media briefing on Thursday, Aug. 6, at 2 p.m. EDT, to discuss early science results of the Kepler mission. Kepler is the first spacecraft with the ability to find Earth-size planets orbiting stars like our sun in a zone where liquid water could exist.
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