spacer spacer spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer
NASA Logo    + View the NASA Portal
   + Discovery Website
   + New Frontiers Website
<empty>
<empty> Go
News bannerNASA meatball
spacer
spacer
HOME > NEWS ARCHIVE CENTER > 2009 > BREAKING NEWS
spacer
spacer
  News Archives
spacer
 


2009 Articles
2008 Articles
2007 Articles
2006 Articles
2005 Articles
2004 Articles
2003 Articles
2002 Articles
2001 Articles
2000 Articles
1999 Articles

spacer

Kepler Delights with Early Science Results
8.06.2009

The exoplanet-hunting Kepler space telescope has detected the atmosphere of a known giant gas planet, demonstrating the telescope's extraordinary scientific capabilities. The discovery was published Friday in the journal Science

Kepler’s target region in the Milky Way
Kepler’s target region in the Milky Way .
Image Credit: NASA/JPL

Kepler team members say these new data indicate that the mission, launched March 6, 2009, from Cape Canaveral, Florida, is indeed capable of finding Earth-like planets, if they exist. Kepler will spend the next three-and-a-half years searching for planets as small as Earth, including those that orbit stars in a warm zone where there could be water. It will do this by looking for periodic dips in the brightness of stars, which occur when orbiting planets transit, or cross in front of, the stars.

"When the light curves from tens of thousands of stars were shown to the Kepler science team, everyone was awed; no one had ever seen such exquisitely detailed measurements of the light variations of so many different types of stars," said William Borucki, the principal science investigator and lead author of the paper.

The observations were collected from a planet called HAT-P-7, known to transit a star located about 1,000 light years from Earth. The planet orbits the star in just 2.2 days and is 26 times closer than Earth is to the sun. Its orbit, combined with a mass somewhat larger than the planet Jupiter, classifies this planet as a "hot Jupiter." It is so close to its star, the planet is as hot as the glowing red heating element on a stove.

The observations were collected from a planet called HAT-P-7, known to transit a star located about 1,000 light years from Earth. The planet orbits the star in just 2.2 days and is 26 times closer than Earth is to the sun. Its orbit, combined with a mass somewhat larger than the planet Jupiter, classifies this planet as a "hot Jupiter." It is so close to its star, the planet is as hot as the glowing red heating element on a stove.

The new Kepler data can be used to study this hot Jupiter in unprecedented detail. The depth of the occultation and the shape and amplitude of the light curve show the planet has an atmosphere with a day-side temperature of about 4,310 degrees Fahrenheit. Little of this heat is carried to the cool night side. The occultation time compared to the main transit time shows the planet has a circular orbit. The discovery of light from this planet confirms the predictions by researchers and theoretical models that the emission would be detectable by Kepler.

 

spacer spacer
spacer
USA.gov - Your First Click to the US Government

NASA Safety Reporting System

NASA Home Page
Project Manager: Shari Asplund
Curator: Anthony Goodeill
NASA Official
: Dennon Clardy
spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer spacer spacer