Login
/
Create Profile
Blog
▸
Search
Store
Surveys
Helpdesk Request
Applicants
Clippings
▸
Search
Events
Clippings
CLIPPINGS
New search
View All
VIEW this News Item
Return to results
More ▼
▸
Printable view
▸
Export to XML
News Item Detail
Title
Kepler Telescope To Send NASA Its Last Images
Short Title
Kepler Telescope To Send NASA Its Last Images
Link
http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/_ufJv9F5k8M/kepler-telescop...
Category
nasa
GUID
https://science.slashdot.org/story/18/07/08/215231/kepler-telescope-to-send...
Publication Date
7/1/2018 6:26 PM
Date Scanned
7/2/2018 5:07 AM
Feed
Slashdot
Description
We don't yet know if there's life on other worlds, however likely that is, but NASA's Kepler Mission satellite has helped pinpoint the abundance of planets orbiting other stars starting in May 2009. So far, it has provided data that scientists have used to confirm the existence of 2,650 exoplanets in a field of over 150,000 stars that it's examining. But that long service is about to end, as NASA said this week the craft is running out of fuel. From a report: The space agency has put the satellite into a form of hibernation until August 2, when there's time booked on the Deep Space Network -- a global array of receivers for space missions -- to download data from its 18th observational mission. Following that download, NASA will use the remaining fuel to start a 19th session. Fortunately, its successor is already in place and operational. The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) launched in April 2018, and produced a test image in May. TESS is a massive upgrade, observing almost 400 times the region of space as Kepler, or about 85% of what's observable from its orbit relative to Earth. Kepler is already a survivor, continuing to operate after part of the gyroscope mechanism failed that let it target star fields. Four wheels rotate in the gyroscope to provide a reaction that allows the necessarily precision in tracking, and two of the four failed by May 2013. NASA mission scientists figured out a clever workaround, in which they used pressure from the Sun to provide additional positioning assistance. The mission resumed under the moniker K2 in May 2014.
Read more of this story
at Slashdot.