European Space Agency Picks Plato Planet-hunting Mission 32
kc123 writes "A telescope to find worlds around other stars has been selected for launch by the European Space Agency's Science Policy Committee. Known as Plato (Planetary Transits and Oscillations of stars), the mission should launch on a Soyuz rocket in 2024. The Plato space telescope will prepare the way for scientists searching for alien life by locating the first genuinely Earth-like exoplanets orbiting nearby stars. It will break new ground in astronomy by using a "bug eye" array of 34 individual telescopes. The intention is for this array to sweep about half the sky, to investigate some of its brightest and nearest stars."
ESA page (Score:4, Interesting)
Here [esa.int] is the ESA Plato page.
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Next they'll pick a peck of peppers (Score:1)
Hooray for alliteration!
Plato planet-hunter and star probe (Score:1)
I don't get it (Score:2)
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more to the point, exactly one is possible (ion thrusters are already used) and a viable fusion reactor may or may not be possible
the rest may as well be wish for pink unicorn that can piss five flavors of fruit juice and shits jelly beans
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NASA has a department of Warp Field Mechanics already.
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It's about the level of commitment appropriate for a very high stakes, difficult to prove idea that's a long shot.
Pato's Cave (Score:3)
Sick of these forced Acronyms (Score:1)
I get it.
Plato was a dude that did stuff a few years back and you want to honor him by using his name for your shiney new space toy.
Really, all you're doing is weakening the name of your thing by naming it after another unrelated thing. I can't talk about "Plato" the telescope and not have people confuse it with Plato the philosopher.
PTOS is a perfectly fine acronym.
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... I can't talk about "Plato" the telescope and not have people confuse it with Plato the philosopher.
Easily fixed. Just have everyone start calling him by what the Classical Greeks actually called the philosopher, which was "Platon" (not "Plato"). Either that or start calling him by his birth-name Aristocles.
So long? (Score:2)
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I'm very glad the project is going forward. But, 10 years?! I have to think the turnaround time could be improved with a little effort, imagination, and courage.
You must be a project manager who doesn't work on government projects. Come on, this is the EU we are talking about. It's going to take them at least half that time to be on holiday.
why Soyuz? (Score:2)
It seems like the smart one might be to wait a bit longer and see what else is cheaper, bigger, better.
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It's an ESA project, for political reasons this will use an ESA launcher. They added a Soyuz launchpad to the Kourou spaceport a few years ago to expand their launcher portfolio on the low end.
Good. There's no such thing as too many planet ... (Score:2)