NASA's newest planet-hunting spacecraft
set for launch in Florida
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[April 16, 2018]
By Joey Roulette
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - A new NASA
satellite designed to detect more Earth-like worlds around stars beyond
our solar system is due for launch aboard a SpaceX rocket from Florida
on Monday, on a quest to expand the known inventory of so-called
exoplanets that might harbor life.
The Transit Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS, was set to lift off
from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 6:32 p.m. EDT, starting the
clock on a two-year, $337 million mission in one of astronomy's newest
fields of exploration.
NASA's latest space-bound astrophysics instrument will be carried aloft
by a Falcon 9 rocket from the fleet of billionaire entrepreneur Elon
Musk's private launch service, Space Exploration Technologies, or
SpaceX.
TESS is designed to build on the work of its predecessor, the Kepler
space telescope, which discovered the bulk of some 3,700 exoplanets
documented by astronomers during the past 20 years and is about to run
out of fuel.
NASA expects to pinpoint thousands more previously unknown worlds,
perhaps hundreds of them Earth-sized or "super-Earth"-sized -- no larger
than twice as big as our home planet.
Those are believed the most likely to feature rocky surfaces or oceans,
and are thus considered the best candidates for life to evolve, as
opposed to gas giants like Jupiter or Neptune.
Astronomers said they hope TESS will help catalog about 100 more rocky
exoplanets for further study.
Roughly the size of a refrigerator with solar-panel wings and equipped
with four special cameras, TESS will take about 60 days to reach a
highly elliptical, first-of-a-kind orbit looping it between Earth and
the moon every two and a half weeks.
Like Kepler, TESS will use a detection method called transit photometry,
which looks for periodic, repetitive dips in the visible light from
stars caused by planets passing, or transiting, in front of them.
But unlike Kepler, which fixed its gaze on a range of stars within a
tiny fraction of the sky, TESS will scan a broader swath of the heavens
to focus on 200,000 pre-selected stars that are closer and thus among
the brightest as seen from Earth.
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TESS, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, is shown in this
photo obtained by Reuters on March 28, 2018. NASA plans to send TESS
into orbit from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida aboard a SpaceX
Falcon 9 rocket set for blastoff sometime between April 16 and June
on a two-year mission. NASA/Handout via REUTERS
That makes them better suited for sensitive follow-up analysis for
the exoplanet candidates TESS locates.
The TESS survey will concentrate on stars called red dwarfs,
smaller, cooler and longer-lived than our sun. Red dwarfs also have
a high propensity for Earth-sized, presumably rocky planets, making
them potentially fertile ground for closer examination.
And because the planets circling them are bigger relative to the
size of the star, and orbit at a closer distance, the slight
disruptions of visible light from their transits are more
pronounced, scientists said.
Measuring blips in starlight can determine the exoplanet's size and
orbital path. Further observations from ground telescopes can supply
its mass and ultimately the planet's density and composition --
whether largely solid, liquid or gas.
TESS itself will not detect life beyond Earth. But its most
promising discoveries will undergo closer scrutiny by a future
generation of larger, more powerful telescopes that will search for
telltale signs of water and atmospheric gases that on Earth are
indicators of life.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette from Cape Canaveral, Fla.; Additional
reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; editing by
Richard Pullin)
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