A NEW APPROACH

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Kepler satellite
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Kepler's photometer (a device that measures the brightness of light) will function like a giant camcorder with a 95 cm (37 inch) diameter lens, flying through space. It will continuously measure the brightness of 100,000 stars and send back information to be analyzed by the science team. When a planet moves in front of a star, as viewed by an observer, the star will get dimmer for several hours, indicating that a planet has passed by. This "transit" of planets across the faces of stars will be recorded by sensors on the photometer and will provide the raw data, which will lead to the determination of the planet's size and the orbital period.
About 80 gas giant planets have been discovered outside of our solar system to date, but this past approach cannot detect planets much smaller than Jupiter.
Only in the last few years have the technologies necessary to conduct a search for small rocky, or
terrestrial, planets with high precision reached maturity. The Kepler Mission will be the first search capable of detecting Earth-size planets.
SIGNIFICANCE OF THE MISSION

Kepler will monitor 100,000 stars similar to our sun for four years. The results will be extremely important either way. If Kepler detects many habitable, Earth-size planets, it could mean the universe is full of life. Kepler would then be a stepping stone to the next extensive search for habitable planets and life, the Terrestrial Planet Finder. If nothing is found, it may mean we're alone in the galaxy.
MISSION MANAGEMENT

The operations phase of the Kepler mission is managed for NASA by the Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena, CA, managed the mission through development, launch and the start of science operations. William Borucki of NASA Ames is the mission’s science principal investigator. Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp., Boulder, CO, was responsible for developing the Kepler flight system.
In October 2009, oversight of the Kepler project was transferred from the Discovery Program at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL, to the Exoplanet Exploration Program at JPL.
For more complete information about the Kepler Mission, click here.

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