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| Kepler telescope retires from planet-hunting | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: Aug 16 2013, 08:56 PM (124 Views) | |
| CJ | Aug 16 2013, 08:56 PM Post #1 |
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A very minor case of serious brain damage
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-23724344 The prolific Kepler space telescope has had to give up its prime planet-hunting mission after engineers failed to find a fix for its hobbled pointing system. The observatory lost the second of its four reaction wheels in May, meaning it can no longer hold completely steady as it looks towards the stars. Nasa engineers have worked through a number of possible solutions but have failed to find one that will work. Kepler has so far confirmed 135 planets beyond our Solar System. But it still has more than 3,500 "candidates" in its database that have yet to be fully investigated, and the vast majority of these are expected to be confirmed as planets in due course. Well, it's certainly served us well by discovering a wealth of potential new extrasolar planets. I hope NASA does something like this again one day - but first, maybe it's best to learn about the ones Kepler has already found .
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12:21 AM Jul 11