Terrestrial Planet Finder 168
solarlux writes "The Terrestrial Planet Finder has taken one step closer to reality as two architectures have been approved by NASA. The first, TPF-c, will be a single optical telescope which employs a coronograph to block starlight for planet detection. TPF-i will be a flotilla of infrared telescopes flying in formation to form a interferometer. TPF-i will analyze the planets identified by TPF-c for life signatures. The telescopes are to be launched within the next 10-15 years."
Terrestrial Planet Finder (Score:3, Funny)
(looks down at the ground) Found one!
Re:Terrestrial Planet Finder (Score:1)
Re:Terrestrial Planet Finder (Score:1)
Re:Terrestrial Planet Finder (Score:1)
Jesus doesn't have a sense of humor. If he did, he would have thought it was funny when...oh forget it. You just can't argue with that kind of logic.
Re:Terrestrial Planet Finder (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Terrestrial Planet Finder (Score:2)
What's that? You claim prior art? Meet our army of EarthCo(tm)(R)(c) lawyers
10-15 years? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:10-15 years? (Score:1)
Re:10-15 years? (Score:4, Insightful)
But, then again, why would anyone have left Europe in the 1500s? Doesn't seem efficient.
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
Yeah, but the pilgramage would be a bitch.
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
Off-topic, but thanks! (Score:2)
thanks for that Zork link.. ahhh, the memories...
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
Generation ships (Score:2, Interesting)
But if you have a self-sustaining colony in space, why even go to a planet? The difference between 66 days and 660 years is that after a few dozen generations, the inhabitants will probably either forget their original mission or chalk it up to "some old religion." Orson Scott Card addressed this "generation ship" issue in more detail in How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy.
Re:Generation ships (Score:3, Insightful)
Picture that you're on a spacecraft with virtually unlimited energy resources, for the purpose of demonstration (yes, I know, even matter-antimatter engines have their limits). You start accelerating. And accelerating. And accelerating. Do you ever see your acceleration stoppin
Re:Time dilation craft (Score:2)
Re:Time dilation craft (Score:2)
Re:Generation ships (Score:2)
Re:10-15 years? (Score:1)
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
They are here: mice (or is it dolphins-- need to brush up on my Douglas Adams).
Seriously though, pretty egotistical to imagine that an advanced race would have the slightest interest in humanity. Hell, most _people_ have no interest in humanity.
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
To assume otherwise is to make assumptions.
You have to assume that all members of all space-faring cultures haven't ever wanted to travel beyond their solar systems. You have to assume this has been the case for billions of years. (Remember, it only takes one culture to want to travel, and the galaxy is eventually filled).
If not, you have to assume that there is an invisible master race colonising the entire galaxy and preventing all other cultures from travelling far, or preventing them all
Re:10-15 years? (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember, it intelligent life isn't dependent on a planet. Any advanced race probably left their world eons ago.
I love these two common assumptions that people mistakenly make about efforts to find other life-friendly planets. Firstly, who said we're looking only for "intelligent" life? I'd be tickled if we found a planet with silicon-based bunny rabbits or something. And secondly, who's to say any "intelligent" life we find has to be "advanced" relative to us? Perhaps we will discover some stone-age cul
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
Of course looking at radio waves is a possibility.
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
Has anyone ever considered the possibility that we might be the first ones, that all other "intelligent" life forms are decades or even eons behind us?
Someone had to achieve "advanced" first.. what if it's us?
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
I for one welcome our new silicon-based bunny rabbit overlords.
Re:10-15 years? (Score:2)
Wouldn't they also probably be using point-to-point transmissions to talk to each other? Really, I'd think the only hope SETI has is if the other species is actively trying to find us or we run into a species no more and no less advanced than we are (heavily relying on broadcast EM communications).
10 to 15 years (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:5, Interesting)
Some of us still want conclusive data on IF, and if so, HOW MANY Earth-like planets there are out there - on the theory that extraterrestrial life is more likely to be found if there are other worlds out there like ours (we know *this* system works, we don't know what else *might* work).
The case for ETI is much stronger if you can show that there ARE many many Earthlike worlds in the universe, compared to the present, where we can say "there MAY be many, with this set of assumptions, or ours may be the ONLY one, if you use this other set of assumptions."
Xentax
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:4, Interesting)
Remember not so long ago te sound barier was seen as unbreakable....
There have already been planets discovered just tens of lightyears away... They are likely to still exist today.
Jeroen
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:3, Informative)
Besides the astronomical cost, many would argue against development of starships as a waste of time due to lack of meaningful destinations for said starships.
Well, this is the first logical step. Find some practical, relatively close targets, then start planning a mission or two. Who knows, we may still be a century from such a mission, but every journey begins with just one step.
Unlike Columbus or Magellan, we can't just go bumbling around until we hit something,
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:5, Informative)
1) Closer planets are easier to detect (for obvious reasons)
2) The heavy metal content in and around our "neighborhood" is greater than that which exists generally through out the Milky Way. This is because before the Solar System was formed, a massive star exploded seeding the area with heavier metals (iron+ on the periodic scale). These heavier atoms are obviously what makes up the Earth. Without this initial seeding, the solar system would only contain hydrogen based planets like Jupiter. Therefore, our local area is the best place to find heavy-metal planets.
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:3, Informative)
On the other hand, stars which are not more than a few billion years old and which were formed in the disk of the galaxy (as opposed to the bulge or the outlying globu
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
The exceptions are objects that share the exact same orbital path of our Sun (I would imagine this is rare), or objects that orbit eachother -- like planets, or binary star systems. Those will stay together while orbiting the galactic center.
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
So while you would think that local stars would drift away quickly, that is not the case. Yes there is stellar drift but not enough to put one star on the other side of the galaxy from another within its life span (without a seriously cataclismic event).
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
If the stars were to be jumbled up that drastically in one rotation, you would expect (to some degree) to see galaxies that are fuzzy balls rather than spiral with arms. My understanding has always been that an arm revolves as a whole unless stripped apart by other forces (speaking generally here). If it did not rotate as a whole, you would not see these communities like the stars of the Or
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
Cool, something to do
Well, I had tho
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
The proof is in the pudding. If the stars rotated as free-floating bodies, there would be no "arms" in the Milky Way. It would look more like a Quasar or a fuzzy ball.
There is also an interstellar cloud of supernova remnants in our local area that I recall reading a paper about a few years ago, but I don't have motivation to go looking for it.
But what do I know... I'm just explaining the current theory. I suppose you could say that the stars revol
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
The term "Dark Matter" means matter we cannot see. Dark Matter is not necessarily some exotic form of mass or particles. The term "baryonic" should have given that away, if you knew what it meant.
"the ggp post about the galaxy rotating as free-floating bodies is equally unproven"
Yes, it is "unproven", but there is no evidence that shows the stars revolve around the center of the galaxy like free-floating bodies. There is evidence that they revolve l
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
Hmm... I think I learned that in elementary school now that I think of it. Maybe it's time for a review, haha!
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
Re:10 to 15 years (Score:2)
Stop being such a small-minded "ME ME ME NOW ME" monkey.
I guess light travels more slowly than I remember. (Score:4, Insightful)
You do realize that with a detection range of a few dozen to a few hundred light-years, we'll be seeing planets as they were at most a few dozen to a few hundred years ago, not hundreds of millions of years, right?
A laser boosted sail-probe could reach a nearby star system ( 10 LY) within one human lifetime. It would be impractial to send one big enough to carry humans, but an automated flyby survey would definitely be feasible.
Re:I guess light travels more slowly than I rememb (Score:2)
Re:I guess light travels more slowly than I rememb (Score:3, Interesting)
I actually doubt that the Forward scheme for sail decelleration will be used. The problem is that you need an array with an aperture size large enough to hit the primary sail at destination range, instead of just 1 LY or so (distance at the end of the boost phase). This makes it a lot more expensive to build.
You also end up having to use a truly huge primary sail (so that it can focus on the secondary
Planning (Score:5, Insightful)
It must be an enormous task to plan so many years ahead into the uncertain future, not sure if the funding will be there.
Re:Planning (Score:2)
Pre-history of a new religious reformation... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Pre-history of a new religious reformation... (Score:2, Insightful)
Sure, historically The Church has had a problem with this idea, but modern religious people for the most part believe in science. In the same way, modern people in The South believe slavery is wrong despite what their ancestors thought. It doesn't make them give up their southern heritage completely though.
Re:Pre-history of a new religious reformation... (Score:2)
Great! (Score:1)
10 - 15 years? That's quite a horizon. (Score:5, Insightful)
Entirely too much can change. You're talking about a funded project that would have to survive multiple shakes up in Administration (and think of all the Bureaucratic structures a NASA funded project relies on!!!) , not to mention a project that would have to be able to keep it's funding for that long.
Plus - in 10-15 years, it's entirely possible that technology might make this particular project irrelevant.
Re: 10 - 15 years? That's quite a horizon. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:10 - 15 years? That's quite a horizon. (Score:3, Insightful)
10-15 years isnt much long than the 9 quoted here.
Sure, it needs massive impotus to continue, but a 10-15 year plan is extremely feasible.
The other alternative is to make the plans so low key that they slip unnoticed under the noses of whichever government is in power at that point.
Re:10 - 15 years? That's quite a horizon. (Score:4, Informative)
They usually are quite involved - with the teams having to prove that certain scientific or engineering assumptions are even possible years before designing a prototype. If you poke around the NASA mission websites, they usually have the timelines posted in detail - sometime with monthly goals.
Re:10 - 15 years? That's quite a horizon. (Score:2)
Re: Terrestrial Planet Finder (Score:4, Interesting)
An offshoot of this perhaps also helps us understand the weather, and provides knowledge about freakish changes (high tides in full moon, etc).
Having said all this, I believe such a terrestrial planet finder is largely an academic pursuit. No wonder there is mention of life-signature searching capabilities in these telescopes, since the masses would be most happy to hear about cosmic neighbours (especially since Mars hasn't proved all that exciting!).
not exciting?? (Score:2)
'scuse me? Within the last 3 months Mars Express resp. the MERs have found on Mars:
a) water ice in the south polar cap, previously thought to be dry ice only;
b) traces of methane (!) in the atmosphere;
c) conclusive evidence for a standing body of liquid water in the past.
All of which is raising the possibility of at least microbial life on Mars, fossil and/or present, which I find plenty exciting. I know it's not much by the entertainment standards of the MTV
Challenges of finding extrasolar planets (Score:5, Informative)
I think ultimately the question is whether there is a single continuous "initial mass function" of isolated objects or not. The best idea as to how stars acquire their initial mass is that turbulence in the interstellar medium, which exists on all scales, establishes a power-law distribution of initial masses. Every once in a while, you get a very strong shock which passes by inside a giant molecular cloud and forces the collapse of a large region which then goes on to form a massive star. But more typically, you form stars more like our sun. [pleaseeat.us] And just as rare as massive collapses are very small mass ones which go on to form isolated brown dwarfs and free-floating planets. If this model holds up to be true, then we are all mincing words in our definitions of isolated systems, since they are all manifestations of the same universal formation process.
However, to avoid the difficult question of formation mechanisms, an IAU working group of some of the most respected people in the field established a working definition [ciw.edu] to define by fiat what it means to be a brown dwarf, and a planet. Extrasolar "planets" are those objects orbiting a star which are beneath the deteurium-burning limit -- regardless of how they are formed. "Brown dwarfs" are defined to be those which burn deuterium but not lithium, and "sub-brown dwarfs" (NOT free-floating planets!) are defined to be those isolated objects which do not burn deuterium. Even the working group itself admitted that this definition was not satisfying to a single member of the group, and so it is likely it will be replaced at a later time with something more physically-motivated. The "planet/planetismal/KBO" distinction was pushed back to our own solar system, since it will be some time before anyone sees anything that small in another system.
Also of interest is the following link, which gives a history of previous claims for additional planetary members of our solar system : SEDS [arizona.edu].
Re:Challenges of finding extrasolar planets (Score:2)
Re:TROLL! (Links...) (Score:2)
TPF-i (Score:3, Informative)
If they can get the formation steady that is.
Re:TPF-i (Score:4, Informative)
Close. A radio interferometric telescope works like this, because we can record and timestamp radio signals with timing precision much finer than their period (typically nanosecond-range and longer). An optical interferometric telescope has to actually bring all of the gathered light to one place and do interference directly, as our electronics aren't good enough to do direct signal sampling, and won't be any time soon (timing precision needed is on the order of femtoseconds for near-IR, and still tens to hundreds of femtoseconds for thermal IR).
This requires _extremely_ good station-keeping for the telescopes, but this is a manageable problem (especially since you don't have to worry about as many vibration sources as you do for earth-based interferometric telescopes).
Googling for "astronomy" and "optical interferometer" will get you links for the interferometric telescopes that have been built to date. Interesting stuff.
OWL (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.eso.org/projects/owl/ [eso.org]
-Johan
Re:OWL (Score:2)
Thank God! We'll finally be able to shut up all of those moon landing hoax conspiracy theorists!
Re:OWL (Score:2)
One would hope that this would but true (dis)believers will say any photo shown as proof of the moon landing is faked. There are people that insist the world in flat [talkorigins.org] and that is alot easier to proove false.
Intelligence limitations (Score:3, Insightful)
As usual, we are impared by our own lack of intelligence. We are going to spend a considerable amount of money building a complex infrastructure to retreive information that is... well... pretty much useless.
We'll be searching for a planet similar to Earth because we believe all life must come in some kind of carbon-made structure forming an organism that needs water to sustain itself and that releases some kind of carbon substance into the atmosphere. We also believe that life on Earth was possible to to it's "moderate" conditions. YET, we keep discovering ON EARTH new species previously unknown who live in the most extreme conditions.
So, from my point of view as an engineer... we'll be looking at a science subject without knowing exactly what to look for and without being able to extract any conclusive information. Futhermore, the technology that has to be developed to attain this study is not altogether new. So, no new relevant or important data, no new significant tech... What's the point, then?
If they need a sugestion on where to spend a couple of billion dollars... why not that not yet fully explored planet Earth, with loads of life that considers itself intelligent?
Re:Intelligence limitations (Score:2)
Only too true, and to give this some scientific backup (to avoid this cynicist-label) -> DÖRNER [amazon.com]
Quote from a review: "Wow - a superb analysis of why we fail even when doing things right!", and I totally agree (I here have the original German version published in 1989 - and it is still topical - well).
CC.
Re:Intelligence limitations (Score:4, Insightful)
This is basic science - its sole purpose is to expand the boundaries of human knowledge. Most great discoveries are by taking a look at something no one has ever seen before. If we never look, who knows what we'll find?
Furthermore - we only have two earth sized planets in the solar system. Thats two datapoints to understand the past, present, and future of our world. By examining other similiar worlds, it could be great use in figuring out what things could happen to our planet - either now or in the future!
Re:Intelligence limitations (Score:4, Insightful)
We have exactly one example of an earthlike planet. That's not much in the way of data, true. On the other hand it is an indisputable, actual, real example of life evolving on a planet.
Parsimony pretty much dictates that before we can consider as realistic other, purely hypothetical modes of life we need to understand the apparent distribution (or lack thereof) of planets with earthlike biomarkers.
I can come up with all sorts of extraordinary ideas about how life might work on other worlds. So can you. All the same I'd argue that making a survey that specifically looks for conditions which we know for certain can be associated with life is the first and logical scientific step which can should taken on this subject.
I actually don't understand people having objections to such a survey - imagine finding two or three strongly supported oxygen/CO2/water worlds within a few hundred light years!
Why such a small array? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why such a small array? (Score:2)
With an optical telescope, which we are discussing here, you can't compare the phase of the light to some clock (yet). Therefore the only way to
Re:Why such a small array? (Score:2)
As I see it, the true issue would be sufficiently parallel physical alignment of the sensors (but perhaps this could also be overcome after the fact with software?)
Re:Why such a small array? (Score:2)
Hubble sees 'planet' around star (Score:1)
Interferometry in space? (Score:3, Interesting)
Is space based interferometry used to filter out things like dust cloud and gravity distortion?
The thought of a huge solar system sized array of telescopes is most excellent
Re:Interferometry in space? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Interferometry in space? (Score:2)
Interferometry is done to simulate a very large telescope by using a bunch of little ones. Primarily done in radio telescopes (like the VLA, the VLBA, etc.) it can also be done in optical telescopes, but the array must be smaller, since you have to physically bounce the light to a common point to combine it (since you can't accurately measure the phase differences otherwise). Still, you can get a 100 m+ sized optical
Darwin / TPF-i (Score:1)
Some details (Score:5, Informative)
Goal: to detect earth-like planets around other starts. Extra-solar planets detected thus far are usually 'hot Jupiters': big planets that orbit the star in a few days. These are relatively easy to detect. Detecting an earth-like planet (which have not been found yet) is far more difficult. It is usually compared to detecting the light of a firefly (reflection of the planet) flying very close to a lighthouse (the star). Measurements need to be done in the far infrared because there the ratio between the planet and the starlight is the highest (but still only 1:10^6 !!). With some luck they might find traces of ozone and CO2 in the spectrum that might be an indication for life.
Methods:
-Coronography: Simply put it is just a conventional big (~10 meter) telescope with a shadow mask that blocks the light of the star. The light of the planet should get past the mask on the detector.
-Interferometry: Somewhat similar to the techniques used in radio astronomy [nrao.edu]. The resolution of a telescope improves by increasing its size. The trick is to combine several small telescopes. The resolution should then be comparable to the resolution of one big telescope that is as wide as the separation between the small ones. With radio interferometry you can do the 'beam combination' by computer. In optics however you have to physically combine the beams of the different telescopes. This requires flying satellites in formation with stabilities on the order of nanometers!! Current schemes are limited to several hundred meters. There are also some attemps to do this on earth [eso.org].
There is quite a lot of politics going on between NASA and ESA at the moment about how they should cooperate. First ideas where to do an interferometry mission together, but now NASA has decided to go for coronography and postpone interferometry to 2020. ESA is sticking to interferometry.
Re:Some details (Score:3, Interesting)
Is that something we could expect during the life of the pla
Re:Some details (Score:2)
Re:Some details (Score:2)
D'oh! At the back of my mind, I knew this. But I didn't think about it when speculating. So, in some ways, the idea I had is unnecessary.
However, shouldn't more satellites in formation provide better imaging? Not better in terms of higher resolution, but better in terms of more information at a given resolution?
Re:Some details (Score:2)
On a related note, interferometers in space are actually not a new thing (supposedly). The NOSS Trio are a set of 3 satelites operated by the Navy and is used to detect ships and the wakes they produce, even at extremely deep depths (supposedly). You can see them in the sky flying in formation. Its really pretty cool.
NOSS Trio [google.com]
Re:Some details (Score:2)
Hubble sees 'planet' - maybe (Score:2, Interesting)
A waste of time (Score:2)
Re:A waste of time (Score:2)
Coronagraph? (Score:3, Interesting)
-T
MOO (Score:2)
Now we need to get rolling on the impulsion stuff once we got the visuals going...
Sweet! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Space exploration is not taken seriously enough (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Jumping the gun? (Score:2)
Somebodys got to build it. Which means plenty of opportunity for cost overruns, bloated budgets and just plain old engineering welfare programs. Inevitably, the first one will wind up landing in the ocean due to a metric-english snafu so we'll have to have a couple spares on hand.
And finding a planet will mean what to me? Cheaper energy resources? A more secure, peaceful environment?
Perhaps a qualified presidential candidate?