Hunt For Earth-Like Planets Delayed 56
An anonymous reader sends along this excerpt from Nature News:
"Kepler, NASA's mission to search for planets around other stars, will not be able to spot an Earth-sized planet until 2011, according to the mission's team. The delays are caused by noisy amplifiers in the telescope's electronics. ... The problem is caused by amplifiers that boost the signals from the charge-coupled devices that form the heart of the 0.95-metre telescope's 95-million-pixel photometer, which detects the light emitted from the distant stars. Three of the amplifiers are creating noise that compromises Kepler's view. The noise affects only a small portion of the data, Borucki says, but the team has to fix the software — it would be 'too cumbersome' to remove the bad data manually — so that it accounts for the noise automatically. He says that the fix should be in place by 2011."
Mindful of Halloween's approach, NASA has put up a piece looking at some of the already-known exoplanets that wouldn't be very friendly to human life.
head scratch... (Score:4, Insightful)
but the team has to fix the software
Why can't we just develop software on the ground to post-process the data?
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Re:head scratch... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:head scratch... (Score:5, Informative)
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Perhaps because introducing incorrect data to your data stream destroys some of your bandwidth. Each incorrect byte is a byte that isn't carrying useful information, whether it's post-processed to be almost-right or not.
Re:head scratch... (Score:5, Informative)
I used to design these kinds of cameras, and there are at least two potential reasons why this can't be done on the ground:
Firstly, and most likely, there's an essential step that needs to be done in the camera hardware. Perhaps something related to Correlated Double Sampling [ccd.com] or Pixel Binning [ccd.com] needs to be adjusted. In the first case, the signal and reset measurements need to be done as close together as possible to reduce 1/f noise, which can quickly dominate the noise side of the SNR expression, and it may be the timing of these measurements that is at fault. In the latter case, there would be a sqrt(N) penalty for measuring the charge on each pixel and then adding the N pixels together. Conversely, reading each pixel multiple times may be necessary to overcome an unexpected noise source - a sqrt(N) improvement in readout noise can be had by measuring the pixel N times and calculating the average of the measurements. All of these adjustments can only be made at the camera; there's no way to accomplish this after the data has been digitized and radioed to Earth.
2 - Bandwidth. There's just no bandwidth available to ship down the raw data so it can be processed on Earth. The spacecraft must send down reduced data and derivative results. Therefore, these corrections need to be made onboard.
These reasons aren't necessarily exclusive, either... both could be true.
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You mean they're sending the developers to the probe? Now that's outsourcing!
Hunt? Delayed? (Score:5, Funny)
That's alright. I'll have another glass of this sherry, and warm me arse by the fire with the hounds.
By the time day is out, we'll have roused to the horns and have the skin of these planets stretched for the drying, before the groom is done brushing nettles from the tail of the ol' horse.
Now, where'd I lay that toothpick? I could use another one of those delightful sandwiches!
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Fishing? Different sport all together, man!
Noise? (Score:2)
I was thinking more along the lines of ear plugs...
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That or invert the polarity of the quantum-modulator. Then the only thing they will have to worry about is local tachyon-fields that are hard to nullify even with Sierpinski-singularities. But I'm sure they will find an elegant solution for that.
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Yes, and maybe if everyone at NASA wore shirts with three wolves on them they'd get more done.
That's OK (Score:2)
I think we can wait another couple years.
What's wrong with this planet? (Score:2)
I'm from Tahiti so I might have missed something in the translation, but what is wrong with this planet?
Re:What's wrong with this planet? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm from Tahiti so I might have missed something in the translation, but what is wrong with this planet?
You're absolutely right. You have missed something. We already know where this planet is and hence don't have to go looking for it.
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Re:What's wrong with this planet? (Score:4, Insightful)
Nothing. But just because Canada is okay doesn't mean I don't want to visit Europe.
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main character looks like Bush in drag.
Thats a long time for a bug fix (Score:1)
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Home planet... (Score:3, Funny)
Higgs (Score:3, Funny)
Sounds like the project might have inadvertently discovered the higgs boson at some point in the future.
Damn! (Score:2)
What? You say we weren't planning on doing anything useful with the data anyway? Well in that case... who cares?!?
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That's not how project management works. The visit date is still the same, you just have two less years to implement.
Oh we'll need to cut your implementation budget by 20% as well to account for some unexpected metal price fluctuations and fully fund the HR and Fiscal department re-baselining.
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We're still waiting on someone to develop FTL drive so we can visit these planets and exploit and plunder them without having to spend several lifetimes getting there. In the meantime, this search will help us know where to go when we develop the FTL drive.
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Dude, give up on your 3-breasted green babe fantasy already.
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I wonder how humanity would be if it was full of people like you, I'm thinking they'd still be in the same cave in the same valley using stone age technology, because there's nothing obviously useful about ever going outside that box and start to melt bronze to get to the bronze age. We want to know because we want to know, whether it's astrophysics or social sciences (try putting a ROI on most of that stuff) or whatever. Of course this we can guess at but that's only because you can guess at what's just a
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riskier to fix on the ground? (Score:2)
But in the end, he says, the team thought it was riskier to pry apart the telescope's electronic guts than to deal with the problem after launch.
Can someone explain to me why this was the case?
Re:riskier to fix on the ground? (Score:4, Insightful)
Basically, while the telecope was still on the ground, any delays could mean invoking the budget cutting ire of funding agencies, and the lauch could have been scrapped. Now that it's up there, they don't really have to worry about that sort of thing anymore.
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GM is moving to Mars to avoid paying back the gov't loans. That's why the Pontiac Aztek looks so ugly (by human standards).
The assumption being, of course... (Score:1)
Urgency? (Score:2)
Communicate? Will take a lot of years to do a "conversation" if there happens to be intelligent life there
Getting there? Still a lot to develop to be able to do such trip for human beings, just doing the technology to make us able to live for years or generations to get there is something potentially more important than finding a "good enough" planet out there. For machines the technology could be ready or close enough, but still, would be a version of the communica
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Allow me to introduce you to TFA:
Borucki points out that the team was probably going to have to wait at least three years to find an extrasolar Earth orbiting in the habitable zone anyway. Astronomers typically wait for at least three transits before they confirm a planet's existence; for an Earth-sized planet orbiting at a distance similar to that between the Earth and the Sun, three transits would take three years.
So no real urgency, per se.
On the other hand, there is likely more we could do in the short term if we knew for certain that an Earth-like planet existed. We could shoot probes at it, point Hubbles at it, focus our efforts on detecting communication signals at it, and so on.
We'll just have to wait even longer now to see if the project pans out.
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On the other hand, there is likely more we could do in the short term if we knew for certain that an Earth-like planet existed. We could shoot probes at it, point Hubbles at it, focus our efforts on detecting communication signals at it, and so on.
While the latter two make sense, the first one is dubious at this point. We've only created two spacecraft that have even left the Solar System (V'ger 1 & 2), and they're nowhere near reaching another star system, and they've been traveling for 30+ years now.
This is just stupid. (Score:2)
Why are we wasting so much money trying to find planets we can't get to? We should be looking for the Stargate instead. Sure we might get targeted by the snake heads but you'd be amazed what you can do with a little C4, a P90, and the occasional nuke. Throw in a language nerd and a hot chick... This at least is doable.
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Ah, but after defeating three increasingly powerful super-enemies, you still have to face the fact that a plodding remake of a bizarro 1970s remake of some show about a trip across the country is getting better ratings.
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We need to know which direction to look for the invasion fleet.
missing the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Kepler Mission is doing well; finding planets (Score:1)