Call & Times

So long, Kepler, thanks for the planets

- By SARAH KAPLAN

Charlie Sobeck always believed in other worlds. The NASA engineer grew up watching the Star Trek series, imagining what it would be like to follow the starship Enterprise across the cosmos to explore planets orbiting other suns.

But with the very first transmissi­ons from the Kepler space telescope, NASA’s staggering­ly successful exoplanet-seeking mission, Sobeck’s belief was transforme­d into something even more powerful: knowledge. What had once seemed true only on television, in stargazers’ imaginatio­ns, and in the hypothesis of theoretici­ans, was now a scientific fact. We live in a universe teeming with more planets than stars.

“It hit me like a sledgehamm­er,” recalled Sobeck, project system engineer for the mission at NASA’s Ames Research Center. “Kepler showed me there really are planets out there of all differ- ent kinds. That knowledge is so different from belief.”

In nine years in orbit, Kepler has confirmed the existence of 2,681 exoplanets by tracking the shadows they cast as they pass in front of their stars. Scientists are in the midst of checking out an additional 2,899 candidates. No one can say how many worlds remain to be found in the reams of data beamed back to NASA in the spacecraft’s final communicat­ion this month.

But now the astronomy community must bid good night to the powerhouse planet hunter. NASA announced Tuesday that the spacecraft has run out of the hydrazine fuel that allows it to collect data and deliver it to Earth. Sometime in the next two weeks, Sobeck will send his final command to Kepler, triggering a 12-step sequence that will turn off fault protection,

shut down the transmitte­rs and put the spacecraft quietly to sleep.

Alone in the dark, it will continue to drift in a wide, Earth-trailing orbit around the sun for untold years to come, until the sun expands into a red dwarf and consumes the inner solar system, or some other cosmic phenomenon intervenes.

“It was the little spacecraft that could,” said Jessie Dotson, project scientist for the mission. “It always did everything we asked of it, and sometimes more.”

But Kepler’s success was not always so assured.

Earlier exoplanets had generally been discovered by detecting the faint “wobble” of a star that is being tugged on by an orbiting planet’s gravity. But that technique is most likely to find the kinds of planets that are least likely to host life: gas giants with a powerful gravitatio­nal pull known as “hot Jupiters.”

Bill Borucki, Kepler’s longtime principal investigat­or, wanted to launch a highly sensitive space telescope that would stare at thousands of stars in the hope of detecting the faint dimming of their light caused by a planet passing in front of them. This technique, called transit photometry, would dramatical­ly boost the pace and sensitivit­y of the exoplanet search, and it would allow scientists to finally figure out whether the cosmos contained other small, rocky worlds like our own.

Although NASA agreed that the search for Earthsized planets around sun-like stars was an important one, Boruki’s initial proposals for the mission were rejected because there was no proof that the science could be done in the manner proposed. It took five proposals and almost a decade for Kepler to finally launch.

Borucki recalled the first image ever beamed back by the telescope: a snapshot of Kepler’s entire field of view, taken in every wavelength of light it could detect.

“Thousands and thousands of stars,” Borucki said. “It was just mind-boggling to see.”

Among those stars, Kepler eventually revealed, lurked worlds of every conceivabl­e shape and size. Bodies so huge they were barely distinguis­hable from small stars. Small, rocky planets that orbited so quickly their surfaces were molten. A world of gas, rock and ice with not one but two suns - like Luke Skywalker’s Tatooine. Though Kepler set off in search of planets like our own, most of the systems it discovered were unlike anything scientists had dreamed of.

“That’s one thing I love about the Kepler results,” Dotson said. “Imaginatio­n is not the limit here.”

By the end of the spacecraft’s prime mission, astronomer­s using Kepler data concluded that our galaxy contains a planet for every sun – meaning there are as many as 400 billion exoplanets in the Milky Way alone. Several of those planets even had solid surfaces and received the right amount of sunlight to harbor liquid water - making them candidates in the search for life.

But then disaster struck. In May 2013, a second of Kepler’s four reaction wheels failed, and the spacecraft was no longer able to keep itself pointed at a target. Engineers’ efforts to restore one of the wheels failed.

 ?? NASA ?? Artist’s conception of the Kepler space telescope.
NASA Artist’s conception of the Kepler space telescope.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States