Updates Kepler: Mission news & launch thread

The spiral orbit is the orbit Kepler is not in to contrast with the orbit it is in.
No, the spiral path is Kepler's heliocentric orbit viewed in a Sun-Earth rotating frame, ie, it shows Kepler's position relative to the Earth. You can see it drifts slowly behind the Earth over the course of its four year mission (its period is slightly greater than that of Earth). The spiral track is due to the fact that Kepler's perihelion is slightly inside Earth's orbital track and its aphelion is somewhat further outside.
 
Spaceflight Now: Kepler's exoplanet survey jeopardized by two issues:
NASA's Kepler space telescope, a sleuth with electronic eyes, needs an extra four years to meet its goal of finding an Earth-sized planet in habitable zones around other stars, but a critical hardware failure aboard the probe this summer has managers worried the mission could end at any time.

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On July 14, one of the spacecraft's four reaction wheels stopped due to increasing friction. The spinning masses control Kepler's orientation in space and keep the telescope locked on to target stars.

"We have to guide very accurately, and we had four reaction wheels to do this guidance," Borucki said. "One of those was a spare, and we now have lost one of those four wheels ... The guiding is still great, but they've all had over a billion revolutions. If we lose another one, this mission terminates. We cannot track very well with two. We cannot track well enough to find planets."

Borucki said engineers will ensure Kepler's three active reaction wheels stay warm and alternate their rotation between clockwise and counter-clockwise directions. Officials believe the measures will help the wheels remain healthy.

"We're trying to understand how to protect those last three wheels," Borucki said. "People have studied these reaction wheels over the years and never came up with a good answer."

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According to Borucki, the noise problem adds to the time and cost of analyzing Kepler data.

And despite the best estimates of scientists before Kepler's launch, most of the sun-like stars in Kepler's field-of-view show more variability than projected.

Coupled with the noisy data derived from technical causes, the variability issue means astronomers need more data to confirm a dip in a star's luminosity is from a transiting planet.

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NASA:
Kepler Mission Manager Update

Oct. 26, 2012

Since the last mission update the Kepler team has completed two science data downloads. The most recent data download on Oct. 5, 2012 included a quarterly roll to the fall science attitude. This marked the successful completion of Quarter 14 flight operations and the beginning of Quarter 15.

The spacecraft's performance continues to be excellent while operating on three reaction wheels. Analysis of the telemetry has revealed no new cause for concern regarding the remaining wheels, and engineers continue to take steps to assure their continued performance.

The Kepler spacecraft trails Earth in a drift-away heliocentric orbit and is currently 42 million miles away. Unlike NASA's Hubble space telescope, the spacecraft is not accessible for a servicing mission.

Meanwhile, scientists from around the world gathered Oct. 4-5, 2012 for the Kepler science working group (SWG) meeting in Mountain View, Calif. SWG members meet biannually to discuss the latest findings in the Kepler data and to discuss future plans.

Last week astronomers met in Reno, Nev. for the annual meeting of the American Astronomical Society's Division of Planetary Sciences (DPS). Fifty oral and poster presentations, including two plenary talks, featured exoplanet science results, many of which derived from Kepler data.

An exciting result presented at DPS was the first reported case of a planet orbiting a double-star that, in turn, is orbited by a second distant pair of stars. The phenomenon is called a circumbinary planet in a four-star system. Coined PH1, and also known as Kepler-64b, the planet was identified by the citizen scientists participating in Planets Hunters, a Yale-led program that enlists the public to review astronomical data from the Kepler mission for signs of planets transiting distant stars. The result has been submitted to the Astrophysical Journal and is available on the preprint server- A Transiting Circumbinary Planet in a Quadruple Star System (Schwamb et al, 2012).

Last week European astronomers announced another exciting result: the discovery of a planet with approximately the same mass as Earth orbiting a star in the Alpha Centauri system- the nearest to Earth. The research team presented novel techniques for separating out planet versus star signals in the Doppler data. It gives us hope that astronomers might one day get mass determinations using the Doppler method for many of Kepler's most interesting planets. The Kepler team applauds and celebrates this exciting milestone in the search to confirm companion worlds. The finding was published in the journal Nature- An Earth mass planet orbiting Alpha Centauri B (Dumusque et al, 2012).

Earlier in October, the Science Operations Center (SOC) deployed version 8.3 of the pipeline software. The new version will allow the team to complete a multi-quarter processing run for the first 12 quarters of data. As noted in the previous update, SOC 8.3 will improve sensitivity for detecting small planets, and help improve the rejection of false positives.

On Oct. 28, 2012, the Kepler project will release 12 additional months of time series data collected between June 2011 and June 2012 to the public archive at the Barbara A. Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes, or MAST, at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Md. This data release marks a milestone for Kepler. As of October 28, all previously collected and processed data for the exoplanet survey will be in the public domain and all future data will be published to the public archive without delay.

During the baseline mission, Kepler data were retained by the mission for exclusive use to ensure they were properly calibrated and searched for transit signatures. A data release schedule was developed to balance the mission goals to identify transiting planets with public access to the data. Although Kepler has met or exceeded every data release milestone, this open data policy for the extended Kepler mission enables the entire scientific community to participate in the survey by finding new planetary candidates within increasingly longer baselines of data with the greatest possible efficiency. The new open data policy also allows greater accuracy in the public characterization of planetary and stellar properties within the Kepler survey.

Finally, Nov. 12, 2012 will mark the successful completion of Kepler's three and a half year prime mission. The team looks forward to continuing the search in the extended mission, as Kepler's best and most exciting discoveries are yet to come.

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NASA / NASA JPL / NASA News Release:
RELEASE : 12-394
NASA's Kepler Completes Prime Mission, Begins Extended Mission


Nov. 14, 2012

WASHINGTON -- NASA is marking two milestones in the search for planets like Earth; the successful completion of the Kepler Space Telescope's 3 1/2- year prime mission and the beginning of an extended mission that could last as long as four years.

Scientists have used Kepler data to identify more than 2,300 planet candidates and confirm more than 100 planets. Kepler is teaching us the galaxy is teeming with planetary systems and planets are prolific, and giving us hints that nature makes small planets efficiently.

So far, hundreds of Earth-size planet candidates have been found as well as candidates that orbit in the habitable zone, the region in a planetary system where liquid water might exist on the surface of a planet. None of the candidates is exactly like Earth. With the completion of the prime mission, Kepler now has collected enough data to begin finding true sun-Earth analogs -- Earth-size planets with a one-year orbit around stars similar to the sun.

"The initial discoveries of the Kepler mission indicate at least a third of the stars have planets and the number of planets in our galaxy must number in the billions," said William Borucki, Kepler principal investigator at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. "The planets of greatest interest are other Earths and these could already be in the data awaiting analysis. Kepler's most exciting results are yet to come."

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SPACE.com: NASA's Prolific Planet-Hunting Mission Goes Into Overtime

AmericaSpace: Kepler Completes Prime Mission

Science Daily: NASA's Kepler Wraps Prime Mission, Begins Extension
 
NASA: Kepler Mission Manager Update: Kepler Returns to Science:
After a "wheel rest" safe mode that began on January 17, 2013, NASA's Kepler spacecraft returned to science data collection at 5 p.m. PST on January 28, 2013. During the 10-day resting safe mode, daily health and status checks with the spacecraft using NASA's Deep Space Network were normal.

The recovery from wheel rest began at 11:30 a.m. PST on January 27, 2013, and proceeded without issue. The spacecraft responded well to commands and transitioned from thruster control to reaction wheel control as planned.

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NASA / NASA JPL:
NASA's Kepler Mission Discovers Tiny Planet System

February 20, 2013

PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA's Kepler mission scientists have discovered a new planetary system that is home to the smallest planet yet found around a star similar to our sun.

The planets are located in a system called Kepler-37, about 210 light-years from Earth in the constellation Lyra. The smallest planet, Kepler-37b, is slightly larger than our moon, measuring about one-third the size of Earth. It is smaller than Mercury, which made its detection a challenge.

The moon-size planet and its two companion planets were found by scientists with NASA's Kepler mission, which is designed to find Earth-sized planets in or near the "habitable zone," the region in a planetary system where liquid water might exist on the surface of an orbiting planet. However, while the star in Kepler-37 may be similar to our sun, the system appears quite unlike the solar system in which we live.

[table="head;width=450"]{colsp=2}
Click on images for details​

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NASA's Kepler mission has discovered a new planetary system that is home to the smallest planet yet found around a star like our sun, approximately 210 light-years away in the constellation Lyra.
Credit: NASA/Ames/JPL-Caltech​
|NASA's Kepler mission has discovered a new planetary system that is home to the smallest planet yet found around a star like our sun, approximately 210 light-years away in the constellation Lyra.
Credit: NASA/Ames/JPL-Caltech​
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Astronomers think Kepler-37b does not have an atmosphere and cannot support life as we know it. The tiny planet almost certainly is rocky in composition. Kepler-37c, the closer neighboring planet, is slightly smaller than Venus, measuring almost three-quarters the size of Earth. Kepler-37d, the farther planet, is twice the size of Earth.

The first exoplanets found to orbit a normal star were giants. As technologies have advanced, smaller and smaller planets have been found, and Kepler has shown that even Earth-size exoplanets are common.

"Even Kepler can only detect such a tiny world around the brightest stars it observes," said Jack Lissauer, a planetary scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. "The fact we've discovered tiny Kepler-37b suggests such little planets are common, and more planetary wonders await as we continue to gather and analyze additional data."

Kepler-37's host star belongs to the same class as our sun, although it is slightly cooler and smaller. All three planets orbit the star at less than the distance Mercury is to the sun, suggesting they are very hot, inhospitable worlds. Kepler-37b orbits every 13 days at less than one-third Mercury's distance from the sun. The estimated surface temperature of this smoldering planet, at more than 800 degrees Fahrenheit (700 degrees Kelvin), would be hot enough to melt the zinc in a penny. Kepler-37c and Kepler-37d, orbit every 21 days and 40 days, respectively.

"We uncovered a planet smaller than any in our solar system orbiting one of the few stars that is both bright and quiet, where signal detection was possible," said Thomas Barclay, Kepler scientist at the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute in Sonoma, Calif., and lead author of the new study published in the journal Nature. "This discovery shows close-in planets can be smaller, as well as much larger, than planets orbiting our sun."

The research team used data from NASA's Kepler space telescope, which simultaneously and continuously measures the brightness of more than 150,000 stars every 30 minutes. When a planet candidate transits, or passes, in front of the star from the spacecraft's vantage point, a percentage of light from the star is blocked. This causes a dip in the brightness of the starlight that reveals the transiting planet's size relative to its star.

The size of the star must be known in order to measure the planet's size accurately. To learn more about the properties of the star Kepler-37, scientists examined sound waves generated by the boiling motion beneath the surface of the star. They probed the interior structure of Kepler-37's star just as geologists use seismic waves generated by earthquakes to probe the interior structure of Earth. The science is called asteroseismology.

The sound waves travel into the star and bring information back up to the surface. The waves cause oscillations that Kepler observes as a rapid flickering of the star's brightness. Like bells in a steeple, small stars ring at high tones while larger stars boom in lower tones. The barely discernible, high-frequency oscillations in the brightness of small stars are the most difficult to measure. This is why most objects previously subjected to asteroseismic analysis are larger than the sun.

With the very high precision of the Kepler instrument, astronomers have reached a new milestone. The star Kepler-37, with a radius just three-quarters of the sun, now is the smallest bell in the asteroseismology steeple. The radius of the star is known to three percent accuracy, which translates to exceptional accuracy in the planet's size.

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Good job! Kepler hunts down two planetary systems with possible Earth-like planets in the "Goldilocks zone" that contains signatures of H2O in their atmospheres! :hailprobe:

http://kepler.nasa.gov/news/nasakeplernews/index.cfm?FuseAction=ShowNews&NewsID=243

Kepler62Diagram.jpg


Kepler69Diagram.jpg
 
I bet that these planets are runaway greenhouses with boiled oceans, hence the H2O in the atmosphere.
 
Why not use ion thrusters and magnetic torquing for precision pointing on future missions. Surely this tech has been developed for quite some time now. Yes?

Reaction wheels have always been a source of problems. So why not eliminate that at the root. The mechanical bearing. Why not make it magnetic? No moving parts touching each other! A mini circular mag-lev like track. It doesn't have to support any weight. And the precise electronic control would be better than any mechanical encoder.
 
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Why not use ion thrusters and magnetic torquing for precision pointing on future missions. Surely this tech has been developed for quite some time now. Yes?

Reaction wheels have always been a source of problems. So why not eliminate that at the root. The mechanical bearing. Why not make it magnetic? No moving parts touching each other! A mini circular mag-lev like track. It doesn't have to support any weight. And the precise electronic control would be better than any mechanical encoder.
I assume that reaction wheels are problematic for every space agency that uses them, and not just something in NASA's designs. The NASA failures may be more high profile and/or other space agencies launch fewer spacecraft.

The Dawn mission has its fair share of reaction wheel failures, so I suppose you're talking about using ion engines to replace RCS thrusters. Dawn will have to use more hydrazine which provides a much greater boost than an ion engine. Is a propellant with such low thrust useful as an RCS?

I'm not familiar with how electromagnetism works, but could changing magnetic fields affect maglev technology in space?
 
Reaction wheels have always been a source of problems.

Because they work. And that for quite a long time. Of course they don't work for infinite time. But for example often longer than a RF ion thruster, that has cathode corrosion and can run out of fuel.

Magnetic torquing is not reliable in higher orbits.

magnetic suspension of the reaction wheel would be nice, but that would also make the costs explode, since you would need a way to suspend the wheel during launch as well.

Reaction wheels are life limited, but not that extreme. And SOHO even operates since 1995 - using mostly its reaction wheels for attitude control since the thrusters can push it also from the L1 point if used too often.

On SOHO, not the four reaction wheels failed, but the three gyroscopes for measuring attitude:

http://www.nasa.gov/offices/oce/appel/ask/issues/46/46i_million_mile_rescue.html

The reaction wheels are still working fine there since 1995.
 
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Remember that Kepler was designed for a 3.5 years lifetime - which it already exceeded by six months. Not as much as many hoped, but already good enough to broaden the sample of exoplanets by at least several times. And the star brightness data will keep many astronomers busy for quite a while as they dig through all kinds of possible star eclipses. :cool:
 
NASA:
MEDIA ADVISORY M13-168
NASA Hosts Media Briefing To Discuss Kepler Results


NASA will video stream a news briefing at 10:15 a.m. PST (1:15 p.m. EST) Monday, Nov. 4, to announce new results from the agency's Kepler mission. The briefing, taking place during the Kepler Science Conference, will be in building 152 at NASA Research Park in Moffett Field, Calif.

With its 2009 launch, Kepler became the first NASA mission capable of finding Earth-sized planets in or near the habitable zone -- the region around a star in which orbiting planets may have surface temperatures that would sustain liquid water. In its last four years of exploration, the Kepler space telescope has detected planets and planet candidates, varying widely in size and orbital distances, helping us better understand our place in the universe.

The briefing participants are:
  • William Borucki, Kepler science principal investigator, Ames
  • Jason Rowe, research scientist, SETI Institute, Mountain View, Calif.
  • Erik Petigura, graduate student, University of California, Berkeley, Calif.
  • William Chaplin, professor for Astrophysics, University of Birmingham, UK

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