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NASA Space

NASA Planet-Hunter Set For Launch (bbc.com) 34

The US space agency is about to launch a telescope that should find thousands of planets beyond our Solar System. From a report: The Tess mission will go up on a SpaceX's Falcon rocket from Cape Canaveral in Florida and survey nearly the entire sky over the course of the next two years. It will stare at stars, hoping to catch the dip in brightness as their faces are traversed by orbiting worlds. Tess will build a catalogue of nearby, bright stars and their planets that other telescopes can then follow up. Key among these will be the successor to Hubble -- the James Webb space observatory, due in orbit from 2020. Its powerful vision will have the capability to analyse the atmospheres of some of Tess's new worlds, to look for gases that might hint at the presence of life.

James Webb will "tease out the chemical compositions of those atmospheres and look for whatever's there," said Paul Hertz, the astrophysics director at Nasa. "People are very interested in looking for, what on Earth, are bio-signatures, such as methane, carbon dioxide, water vapour and oxygen." Tess follows in the footsteps of Kepler, a groundbreaking space telescope launched in 2009. It also used the "transit technique" to confirm more than 2,000 so-called exoplanets. But Kepler, for its primary mission at least, only looked at a very small patch of sky, and many of its discoveries were simply too far away or too dim for other telescopes to pursue with further analysis.
The launch of TESS was scheduled to Monday evening, but it has been postponed until Wednesday. SpaceX tweeted Monday afternoon that it is "standing down today to conduct additional GNC [guidance navigation control] analysis, and teams are now working towards a targeted launch of @NASA_TESS on Wednesday, April 18."
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NASA Planet-Hunter Set For Launch

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  • Congress is planning on killing the James Webb telescope as it can't now meet the absolute maximum budget authorized.

  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Tuesday April 17, 2018 @03:31PM (#56454505)

    Anyone know how long before we launch a telescope capable of imaging one of these planets?

    • Answer: Never. Reason: Physics.
      • by crunchygranola ( 1954152 ) on Tuesday April 17, 2018 @05:49PM (#56455251)

        Physics begs to differ [wikipedia.org]. Using a combination of a starshade external coronagraph, a large aperture telescope, and interferometry it will be possible to image the closer Earth-like planets at least.

        But it won't be for time. An initial starshade mission will need to be funded and launched, probably with a dedicated 4 meter telescope. 20 years perhaps,

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Considering that we recently managed to image a very distant red giant star well enough to see large sunspots and other features it should not be impossible to eventually image a planet if we have a big enough telescope array.

    • Look up angular resolution on your favorite search engine. Note that resolution = wavelength / baseline, where baseline is ginormous in order to get the fine resolution needed to image an extrasolar planet.

  • This is the first step for finding habitable planets outside of our solar system. The next step will be to build an interplanetary rocket. Musk is already working on that. Soon we will be able to get off this rock stuck in a gravity well forever!
    • by Knuckles ( 8964 )

      Not sure if serious.

      • Why wouldn't I be serious? Do you want to be stuck on this rock forever? What if an asteroid hits?
        • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

          Why wouldn't I be serious? Do you want to be stuck on this rock forever? What if an asteroid hits?

          I can only speak for myself, but I'm quite happy to be stuck on this rock -- it's (more or less) exactly the sort of rock my ancestors evolved to thrive on, so it suits me fine. In fact, I think it's quite pleasant, especially when compared to the available alternatives.

          As far as the risk of an asteroid hitting the Earth and killing me, that is something to be vaguely concerned about, but it's hard to see how traveling into outer space would reduce my chances of an early death -- rather quite the opposite.

        • by Knuckles ( 8964 )

          If you were serious you are severely underestimating interstellar distances.

  • by swell ( 195815 )

    "gases that might hint at the presence of life ... methane "

    Excuse me, just because our atmosphere reeks with cow (& human) farts doesn't mean that all life has these problems. Any advanced civilization not obsessed with making weapons would have solved the problem.

    • Methane is a problem? Who knew?
    • Methane from biological functions of living organisms is not a problem on Earth. Nor is carbon dioxide from those processes either.

      The industrial production of these gasses may be another matter

  • by Woldscum ( 1267136 ) on Tuesday April 17, 2018 @03:58PM (#56454673)

    https://youtu.be/aY-0uBIYYKk [youtu.be]

    "SpaceX is targeting launch of NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) on Wednesday, April 18 from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida. The 30-second launch window opens at 6:51 p.m. EDT, or 22:51 UTC. TESS will be deployed into a highly elliptical orbit approximately 48 minutes after launch.

    Following stage separation, SpaceX will attempt to land Falcon 9’s first stage on the “Of Course I Still Love You” droneship, which will be stationed in the Atlantic Ocean."

  • Planet X is out there. Art Bell told me so.

    Before he died. Or from beyond the grave. Hard top tell which.

    Tess will find it. Elon Musk will explore it, and find Elvis at last.

    I wonder if there are crop circles on Nibiru. Tess will tell.

    Drat, time to feed the unicorns and mermaids again.

  • Shhh. Be vewy vewy quiet... I'm hunting pwanets!

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