Nelson Mail

Nasa’s googling finds a solar system just like ours

- TOM WHIPPLE The Times

For the first time, Nasa has found a star system with as many planets as our own.

It could not have done so, however, without two unlikely sources of help: Google software engineers and the decision to strip Pluto of its status as a planet.

Yesterday Nasa announced that a reanalysis of the data from its Kepler space telescope, which has already found more than 1000 planets, had identified a faint signal in a system 2500 light years from Earth.

This small planet, Kepler-90i, would ordinarily be unremarkab­le.

Orbiting close to its star, its surface would be "sizzling hot", Nasa scientists said, and it is not a contender for harbouring life.

However, its discovery meant that its system had eight verified planets.

"This ties Kepler 90 with our own solar system for having the most known planets," said Paul Hertz, director of astrophysi­cs at Nasa, which has not counted Pluto as a planet since 2006.

Just as significan­tly, Nasa hopes that the manner of its discovery, thanks to artificial intelligen­ce software, will open up a new front in astronomy.

The Kepler space telescope identifies planets by scanning the light coming from stars and looking for the faint dimming caused by a planet passing in front of them.

To spot this requires analysing vast quantities of data.

That was why Christophe­r Shallue, an engineer at Google, thought his company could help.

"In my spare time, I started googling for ’finding exoplanets with large data sets’ and found out about the Kepler mission and the huge data set available," he said.

With Nasa he trained a "neural network" by using 15,000 previously vetted signals from the Kepler mission. This program, which learns patterns in a way roughly analogous to a human brain, was able to look through the data collected by Kepler to see if any similar planetary signals had been missed in the 670 star systems known to exist.

By doing this, Nasa was able to find two new planets, one of which was Kepler- 90i. The other, Kepler80g, was in a system containing six planets. Andrew Vanderburg, from Nasa, worked with Mr Shallue. He said that the faintness of the signals made it difficult.

"It’s like sifting through rocks to find jewels. If you have a finer sieve then you will catch more rocks but you might catch more jewels as well."

Nasa’s much-hyped press conference, announced a week in advance, disappoint­ed some. There had been rumours that it would confirm a major advance in the search for extraterre­strial life and bookmakers had lowered the odds of finding aliens.

Dr Vanderburg said that people should still be excited. "This is the first exoplanet system with eight planets, but almost certainly not the last . . . Maybe there are systems out there with so many planets they make our system seem ordinary."

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