NASA telescope discovers two new planets
five months after launch
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[September 21, 2018]
By Joey Roulette
ORLANDO, Fla. (Reuters) - A planet-hunting
orbital telescope designed to detect worlds beyond our solar system
discovered two distant planets this week five months after its launch
from Cape Canaveral, Florida, officials said on Thursday.
NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, better known as TESS, made
an early discovery of "super-Earth" and "hot Earth" planets in solar
systems at least 49 light-years away, marking the satellite's first
discovery since its April launch. TESS is on a two-year, $337 million
mission to expand astronomers' known catalog of so-called exoplanets,
worlds circling distant stars.
While the two planets are too hot to support life, TESS Deputy Science
Director Sara Seager expects many more such discoveries.
"We will have to wait and see what else TESS discovers," Seager told
Reuters. "We do know that planets are out there, littering the night
sky, just waiting to be found."
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 during the past 20 years and is running 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.
Scientists have said they hope TESS will ultimately help catalog at
least 100 more rocky exoplanets for further study in what has become one
of astronomy's newest fields of exploration.
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TESS, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, is shown in this
NASA photo obtained by Reuters on March 28, 2018. Courtesy
NASA/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
MIT researchers on Wednesday announced the discovery of Pi Mensae c,
a "super-earth" planet 60 light-years away orbiting its sun every
6.3 days. The discovery of LHS 3844 b, a "hot-earth" planet 49
light-years away that orbits its sun every 11 hours, was announced
on Thursday.
Pi Mensae c could have a solid surface or be a waterworld as the
composition of such planets is a mixed bag, Martin Spill, NASA's
program scientist for TESS, said in a phone interview.
The two newest planets, which still need to be reviewed by other
researchers, offer the chance for follow-up study, officials said.
"That, of course, is TESS' entire purpose - to find those planets
around those brightest nearby stars to do this really detailed
characterization," Spill said.
With four special cameras, TESS uses a detection method called
transit photometry, which looks for periodic dips in the visible
light of stars caused by planets passing, or transiting, in front of
them.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette in Orlando, Fla., Editing by Ben Klayman
and Diane Craft)
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