NASA Kepler beams back stunning pic of neighbouring star system TRAPPIST-1
Scientists at NASA recently
announced the discovery of neighbouring star systems with seven planets that
migh host life — TRAPPIST-1. The discovery was made using Spitzer Space
Telescope in combination with ground-based telescopes. The US space agency has
deployed Kepler space telescope to observe the star system for last three
months and the telescope has beamed stunning images of the TRAPPIST-1.
During the period of Dec. 15,
2016 to March 4, the Kepler spacecraft, operating as the K2 mission, collected
data on the star’s minuscule changes in brightness due to transiting planets.
These additional observations are expected to allow astronomers to refine the
previous measurements of six planets, pin down the orbital period and mass of
the seventh and farthest planet, TRAPPIST-1h, and learn more about the magnetic
activity of the host star.
“Scientists and enthusiasts
around the world are invested in learning everything they can about these
Earth-size worlds,” said Geert Barentsen, K2 research scientist at NASA’s Ames
Research Center at Moffett Field, California. “Providing the K2 raw data as
quickly as possible was a priority to give investigators an early look so they
could best define their follow-up research plans. We’re thrilled that this will
also allow the public to witness the process of discovery.”
The release of the raw,
uncalibrated data collected will aid astronomers in preparing proposals due
this month to use telescopes on Earth next winter to further investigate
TRAPPIST-1. By late May, the routine processing of the data will be completed
and the fully calibrated data will be made available at the public archive.
The observation period, known as
K2 Campaign 12, provides 74 days of monitoring. This is the longest, nearly
continuous set of observations of TRAPPIST-1 yet, and provides researchers with
an opportunity to further study the gravitational interaction between the seven
planets, and search for planets that may remain undiscovered in the system.
TRAPPIST-1 wasn’t always on the
radar to study. In fact, the initial coordinates for the patch of sky defined
as Campaign 12 were set in Oct. 2015. That was before the planets orbiting
TRAPPIST-1 were known to exist, so Kepler would have just missed the region of
space that is home to this newfound star system of interest.
But in May 2016, when the
discovery of three of TRAPPIST-1’s planets was first announced, the teams at
NASA and Ball Aerospace quickly reworked the calculations and rewrote and
tested the commands that would be programmed into the spacecraft’s operating
system to make a slight pointing adjustment for Campaign 12. By Oct. 2016,
Kepler was ready and waiting to begin the study of our intriguing neighbor in
the constellation Aquarius.
We were lucky that the K2 mission
was able to observe TRAPPIST-1. The observing field for Campaign 12 was
set when the discovery of the first planets orbiting
TRAPPIST-1 was announced, and the science community had already
submitted proposals for specific targets of interest in that field,” said
Michael Haas, science office director for the Kepler and K2 missions at Ames.
“The unexpected opportunity to further study the TRAPPIST-1 system was quickly
recognized and the agility of the K2 team and science community
prevailed once again.”
The added refinements to the
previous measurements of the known planets and any additional planets that may
be discovered in the K2 data will help astronomers plan for follow-up studies
of the neighboring TRAPPIST-1 worlds using NASA’s upcoming James Webb Space Telescope.
During Campaign 12, a cosmic ray
event reset the spacecraft’s onboard software causing a five-day break in
science data collection. The benign event is the fourth occurrence of cosmic
ray susceptibility since launch in March 2009. The spacecraft remains healthy
and is operating nominally.
Ames manages the Kepler and K2
missions for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, California, managed Kepler mission development. Ball
Aerospace & Technologies Corp. operates the flight system with support from
the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado
in Boulder.
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