The Columbus Dispatch

Ailing Kepler telescope cleared for new duty

- By Irene Klotz REUTERS

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA plans to revive its planet-hunting Kepler Space Telescope for a new mission after a positionin­g-system problem sidelined the observator­y last year, officials said on Friday.

The telescope was launched in 2009 to search for Earth-size planets suitably positioned around their parent stars to enable liquid water, a condition believed necessary for life.

Kepler scientists still are analyzing data to find a true Earth analog but already have added 962 confirmati­ons and 3,845 candidates to the list of 1,713 planets discovered beyond the solar system.

Kepler’s steady gaze was broken last year when it lost the second of four positionin­g wheels. Three are needed for precision pointing.

“Good news from NASA HQ,” Kepler deputy project manager Charlie Sobeck wrote in a status report posted on the Kepler website. “The two-wheel operation mode of the Kepler spacecraft … has been approved.”

The first observatio­ns of the new campaign, called K2, are scheduled to begin on May 30.

Kepler worked by monitoring about 150,000 target stars for slight but regular changes in brightness, a possible sign of a planet passing by, or transiting, relative to the telescope’s line of sight.

An Earth-size planet moving around its host star as close as Earth circles the sun would transit once every 365 days. Scientists want to see at least three transits to be sure any telltale light dips are caused by a passing planet and not a stellar flare or other phenomenon.

Engineers developed a plan to use pressure from sunlight to balance the telescope, though it no longer will be stable enough to catch the faint signs of small, transiting planets.

NASA approved a two-year follow-on mission encompassi­ng all types of stars, rather than just stars like the sun. The observatio­ns also will include star clusters, supernovas and objects beyond the Milky Way.

Kepler currently costs NASA about $18 million a year. The telescope flies in an orbit about 40 million miles from Earth.

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