by Felicia Chou and Michele Johnson
May 10, 2016
from
NASA Website
This artist's
concept depicts select planetary discoveries
made to date by
NASA's Kepler space telescope.
Credits: NASA/W. Stenzel
NASA's
Kepler mission has verified 1,284
new planets - the single largest finding of planets to date.
"This announcement more than doubles
the number of confirmed planets from Kepler," said Ellen Stofan,
chief scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
"This gives us hope that somewhere
out there, around a star much like ours, we can eventually
discover another Earth."
Analysis was performed on the Kepler
space telescope's July 2015 planet candidate catalog, which
identified 4,302 potential planets:
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For 1,284 of the candidates, the
probability of being a planet is greater than 99 percent -
the minimum required to earn the status of "planet."
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An additional 1,327 candidates
are more likely than not to be actual planets, but they do
not meet the 99 percent threshold and will require
additional study.
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The remaining 707 are more
likely to be some other astrophysical phenomena.
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This analysis also validated 984
candidates previously verified by other techniques.
"Before the Kepler space telescope
launched, we did not know whether
exoplanets were rare or common in the galaxy.
Thanks to Kepler and the research
community, we now know there could be more planets than stars,"
said Paul Hertz, Astrophysics Division director at NASA
Headquarters.
"This knowledge informs the future
missions that are needed to take us ever-closer to finding out
whether we are alone in the universe."
Kepler captures the discrete signals of
distant planets - decreases in brightness that occur when planets
pass in front of, or transit, their stars - much like the May 9
Mercury transit of our sun.
Since the discovery of the first planets
outside our solar system more than two decades ago, researchers have
resorted to a laborious, one-by-one process of verifying suspected
planets.
This latest announcement, however, is based on a statistical
analysis method that can be applied to many planet candidates
simultaneously.
Timothy Morton, associate
research scholar at Princeton University in New Jersey and lead
author of the scientific paper (An
Efficient Automated Validation Procedure for Exoplanet Transit
Candidates) published in The Astrophysical Journal,
employed a technique to assign each Kepler candidate a planet-hood
probability percentage - the first such automated computation on
this scale, as previous statistical techniques focused only on
sub-groups within the greater list of planet candidates identified
by Kepler.
"Planet candidates can be thought of
like bread crumbs," said Morton.
"If you drop a few large crumbs on
the floor, you can pick them up one by one. But, if you spill a
whole bag of tiny crumbs, you're going to need a broom. This
statistical analysis is our broom."
In the newly-validated batch of planets,
nearly 550 could be rocky planets like Earth, based on their size.
Nine of these orbit in their sun's
habitable zone, which is the
distance from a star where orbiting planets can have surface
temperatures that allow liquid water to pool.
With the addition of these nine, 21
exoplanets now are known to be members of this exclusive group.
"They say not to count our chickens
before they're hatched, but that's exactly what these results
allow us to do based on probabilities that each egg (candidate)
will hatch into a chick (bona fide planet)," said Natalie
Batalha, co-author of the paper and the Kepler mission scientist
at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California.
"This work will help Kepler reach
its full potential by yielding a deeper understanding of the
number of stars that harbor potentially habitable, Earth-size
planets - a number that's needed to design future missions to
search for habitable environments and living worlds."
Of the nearly 5,000 total planet
candidates found to date, more than 3,200 now have been verified,
and 2,325 of these were discovered by Kepler.
Launched in March 2009, Kepler is the
first NASA mission to find potentially habitable Earth-size planets.
For four years, Kepler monitored 150,000 stars in a single patch of
sky, measuring the tiny, telltale dip in the brightness of a star
that can be produced by a transiting planet.
In 2018, NASA's
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite
will use the same method to monitor 200,000 bright nearby stars and
search for planets, focusing on Earth and Super-Earth-sized.
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Ames manages the Kepler
missions for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in
Washington.
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The agency's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory (JPL)
in Pasadena, California, managed Kepler mission development.
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Ball Aerospace & Technologies
Corporation operates the flight system, with
support from the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space
Physics (LASP)
at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
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