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Venice News Updates

News of Venice, CA and Marina del Rey CA

Kepler Space Telescope Finds Earth-Sized World

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    Eklund scours the astronomy press releases and chooses the one or ones most interesting for his readers. This is a press release from (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) SETI Institute.

New World

Scientists analyzing four years of data from NASA’s Kepler mission have released a new catalog of exoplanet candidates. The catalog adds more than 500 new possible planets to the 4,175 already found by the famed space-based telescope.

“This catalog contains our first analysis of all Kepler data, as well as an automated assessment of these results,” says SETI Institute scientist Jeffrey Coughlin who led the catalog effort. “Improved analysis will allow astronomers to better determine the number of small, cool planets that are the best candidates for hosting life.”

The Kepler space telescope identifies possible planets by observing periodic dips in the brightness of stars. However, confirmation of their true planetary status requires observations by other instruments, typically looking for slight shifts in the motion of the host suns. Historically, the overwhelming majority of Kepler’s discoveries have turned out to be actual planets.

The new catalog includes 12 candidates that are less than twice Earth’s diameter, orbiting in the so-called habitable zone of their star. This zone is the range of distances at which the energy flux from the star would permit liquid water to exist on the planet’s surface. Of these candidates, Kepler 452b is the first to be confirmed as a planet. At a distance of 1,400 light-years, Kepler 452b accompanies a star whose characteristics are very similar to the Sun: it is 4 percent more massive and 10 percent brighter. Kepler 452b orbits its star at the same distance as Earth orbits the Sun.

“Kepler 452b takes us one step closer to understanding how many habitable planets are out there,” notes Joseph Twicken, also of the SETI Institute and the lead scientific programmer for the Kepler mission. “Continued investigation of the other candidates in this catalog and one final run of the Kepler science pipeline will help us find the smallest and coolest planets. Doing so will allow us to better gauge the prevalence of habitable worlds.”

Kepler 452b has a better than even chance of being a rocky world on the basis of its size and the type of star that it orbits. It falls into a class of planets that are between the size of Earth and Neptune. While these are the most abundant type of world found by Kepler, our own solar system does not boast such a planet.

Intriguingly, while similar in size and brightness to the Sun, Kepler 452b’s host star is 1.5 billion years older. It therefore can give us a peek into a crystal ball showing a possible future for Earth.

“If Kepler 452b is indeed a rocky planet, its location vis-a-vis its star could mean that it is just entering a runaway greenhouse phase of its climate history,” says Doug Caldwell, a SETI Institute scientist working on the Kepler mission. “The increasing energy from its aging sun might be heating the surface and evaporating any oceans. The water vapor would be lost from the planet forever.”

“Kepler 452b could be experiencing now what the Earth will undergo more than a billion years from now, as the Sun ages and grows brighter,” Caldwell adds.

Eyeing Up Earth-Like Planets

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Based on a press release from United Kingdom Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).

Almost 2,000 exoplanets have been discovered to date, ranging from rocky Earth-like planets to hot Jupiters, and orbiting every type of star. But how many of these distant worlds are habitable? Today’s technology means that we currently have very little information about what exoplanets are like beyond their presence, size and distance from star.

With the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), http://www.jwst.nasa.gov), we may have our first glimpses into atmospheres of Earth-like exoplanets, according to the results of a study by Dr. Joanna Barstow, presented at the British National Astronomy Meeting in Llandudno, Wales, UK, on Wednesday, July 8.

“A planet’s atmosphere provides a good guide to likely conditions on the surface,” said Barstow, of the University of Oxford. “The Earth’s atmosphere contains significant amounts of nitrogen, oxygen, ozone and water. By contrast, its inhospitable ‘evil twin,’ Venus, has an atmosphere made mostly of carbon dioxide, which drives its surface temperature to a blistering 450 degrees Celsius.”

A successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, JWST is due for launch in 2018 and will study the universe in infrared wavelengths. Barstow’s study shows that JWST may be able to differentiate between a planet with a clement, Earth-like atmosphere, and one with more hostile conditions such as are found on our neighboring planet Venus. JWST will have the capability to detect key markers that could indicate the presence of a climate like our own when looking at Earth-size planets around stars that are smaller and redder than

sunshieldstacks

NASA’s Webb Sunshield Stacks Up To Test! The Sunshield on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is the largest part of the observatory’s five layers of thin membrane that must unfurl reliably in space to precise tolerances. Recently, engineers stacked and unfurled a full-sized test unit of the Sunshield and it worked perfectly.

Different gases have already been identified successfully in the atmospheres of several large, hot, Jupiter-size planets by studying tiny variations in the starlight that passes through their atmospheres when they cross in front of their parent stars. However, these variations are minuscule: the light filtered through the exoplanet’s atmosphere is one ten-thousandth of the total starlight detected. Studying planets the size of the Earth is an even greater challenge. Although JWST would struggle with analyzing a solar system exactly like our own, it would be capable of studying Earth-like planets around cooler stars—if such a system were to be found.

“If we took the Earth and Venus, and placed them in orbit around a cool, red star that’s not too far away, our study shows that JWST could tell them apart. Earth’s ozone layer, 10 kilometers above the surface, is produced when light from the Sun interacts with molecules of oxygen in our atmosphere, and it produces an unmistakable signal that could be detected by JWST. Venus, without a substantial ozone layer, would look very different,” said Barstow. “That’s assuming that planets starting out like Earth and Venus would evolve in the same way around a cool star!”

However, JWST will be used for a wide range of astronomical applications, not just detecting exoplanets, and securing time on the telescope will be highly competitive. To make these detections, astronomers would need to observe the exoplanets at least 30 times, taking valuable telescope time.

“Future telescopes that are dedicated to observing the atmospheres of many rocky planets around different stars will be required to fully resolve the question of habitability on exoplanets. In the meantime, JWST will observe many other weird and wonderful planets in unprecedented detail,” said Barstow.

Looking Up by Bob Eklund

Bob Eklund

Based on press releases from Space Telescope Science Institute and Keele University.

LONELY GALAXY “LOST IN SPACE.” Space is big, dark, and lonely. But some parts of it are more lonely than others.

Most galaxies are clumped together in groups or clusters. A neighboring galaxy is never far away. But one galaxy, known as NGC 6503, has found itself in a lonely position, at the edge of a strangely empty patch of space called the Local Void.

The Local Void is a huge stretch of space that is at least 150 million light-years across. It seems completely empty of stars or galaxies. The galaxy’s odd location on the edge of this never-land led stargazer Stephen James O’Meara to dub it the “Lost-in-Space galaxy” in his 2007 book, Hidden Treasures.

NGC 6503

NGC 6503 is 18 million light-years away from us in the northern circumpolar constellation of Draco the Dragon. It is some 30,000 light-years in diameter, about one-third the size of our own home galaxy, the Milky Way.

SCHOOLBOY DISCOVERS A NEW PLANET
A 15-year-old schoolboy has discovered a new planet orbiting a star 1,000 light years away in our galaxy. Tom Wagg was doing work-experience at Keele University, Staffordshire, England, when he spotted the planet by finding a tiny dip in the light of a star as a planet passed in front of it.

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(Illustration by David A. Hardy.)
An artist’s impression of Tom’s planet, WASP-142b, orbiting its star, WASP-142. The planet is depicted as seen from a hypothetical moon. A second, dimmer star is seen in the background. Being 1,000 light years away, the planet is too distant to obtain a direct image.

Tom Wagg at Keele Observatory, Keele University, United Kingdom

Tom Wagg at Keele Observatory, Keele University, United Kingdom

“I’m hugely excited to have a found a new planet, and I’m very impressed that we can find them so far away,” says Tom, now aged 17. (It has taken two years of further observations to prove that Tom’s discovery really is a planet.)

Tom found the planet by looking at data collected by the WASP (Wide Angle Search for Planets) project, which surveys the night skies monitoring millions of stars to look for the tell-tale tiny dips (transits) caused by planets passing in front of their host star.

Tom’s planet has been given the catalogue number WASP-142b, being the 142nd discovery by the WASP collaboration. It is in the Southern constellation of Hydra the Water Snake. While astronomers worldwide have now found over 1,000 extra-solar planets, Tom is possibly the youngest ever to have done so.

“The WASP software was impressive, enabling me to search through hundreds of different stars, looking for ones that have a planet,” says Tom. The planet is the same size as Jupiter, but orbits its star in only two days. With such a short orbital period, the transits occur frequently, making such planets much easier to find.

Tom, a pupil at Newcastle-under-Lyme School, who has always been deeply interested in science, asked for the work-experience week after learning that Keele University had a research group studying extra-solar planets.

“Tom is keen to learn about science, so it was easy to train him to look for planets,” says Professor Coel Hellier, who leads the WASP project at Keele.

The planet does not yet have a name, though the International Astronomical Union has started a contest to name extra-solar planets. Tom is looking forward to making a suggestion for his planet.

Wish Upon a Star at Star Party

Or count all your lucky stars at the “Star Party,” Saturday (25 April) from 7:30-10 pm at the Christian Science church parking lot, 7855 Alverstone Ave, Westchester.

Astronomer enthusiast Bob Eklund will have several high quality telescopes of different types set up. His plan is to give participants a view of Jupiter with its four moons, Earth’s moon, and stars and nebulae.

Eklund says bring the children and learn astronomy together. Enjoy the sky. If it is cloudy or rainy, there will be an indoor learning session on basic astronomy.

It’s a Star Party!

Check out your lucky star 25 April from 7:30-10 pm at the Christian Science church parking lot, 7855 Alverstone Ave, Westchester.

Astronomer enthusiast Bob Eklund will have several high quality telescopes of different types set up. His plan is to view Jupiter with its four moons, Earth’s moon, and stars and nebulae.

Eklund says bring the children and learn astronomy together. Enjoy the sky. If it is cloudy or rainy, there will be an indoor learning session on basic astronomy.