NASA’s Kepler Telescope Confirms a Record-Breaking 1,284 New Planets

(The Washington Post) —
This artist's concept depicts select planetary discoveries made to date by NASA's Kepler Space Telescope. (W. Stenzel/NASA)
This artist’s concept depicts select planetary discoveries made to date by NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope. (W. Stenzel/NASA)

NASA scientists announced 1,284 new exoplanets at a news conference on Tuesday – candidates found by the Kepler Space Telescope that have now been confirmed with 99 percent certainty. This is the largest dump of new planet discoveries in history, and it more than doubles the count of confirmed planets for the intrepid space telescope.

On Monday, earthlings watched as Mercury passed between our planet and the sun, all three celestial bodies lining up in just the right way for Mercury to appear as a small black dot creeping over our bright host star. That phenomenon – one planet passing in front of its star, from the visual perspective of another planet – is known as a “transit.” And that’s how Kepler finds new, alien worlds.

Kepler (which is technically broken, but still finds new planets in its second life as “K2”) tracks the subtle dimming of distant stars to detect possible planets that orbit them. It’s our best method for detecting exoplanets, even though it can only hunt down worlds that are set up to “transit” from Earth’s perspective.

Even though the data collection of the K1 mission is over, scientists are still working on parsing out the primary mission’s data. They have to weed out false positives from the thousands of potential planets – star dimming actually caused by mischievous companion stars or other objects.

In a paper published Tuesday in the Astrophysical Journal, a team led by Princeton University’s Timothy Morton presents a new statistical method for calculating the likelihood that a given candidate is, in fact, a planet. Their analysis yielded 1,284 confirmations. Another 1,327 planets from the Kepler catalogue are almost certainly planets, according to the researchers, but these worlds don’t reach the 99 percent probability threshold – so more study will be needed to adequately confirm their existence. The other 707 potential worlds are likely nonexistent, according to the analysis.

“Planet candidates can be thought of like bread crumbs,” Morton said in a statement. “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.”

“They say not to count your chickens before they’re hatched, but Tim’s numbers allow us to do exactly that,” Natalie Batalha, Kepler mission scientist at NASA’s Ames Research Center, said during Tuesday’s news conference. “This is going to be very important for Kepler’s most valuable planet discoveries, those small planets found orbiting in the habitable zone.”

As of today, NASA knows of 21 exoplanets that it considers likely to be rocky, potentially wet worlds. And based on Kepler data, Batalha said, our galaxy probably has more than 10 billion rocky planets that live in the habitable zones of their stars.

That’s a lot of Earths.

Scientists could further explore the habitability of these worlds by measuring the way their host stars’ light changes as it passes through planetary atmospheres. The molecular signatures analyzed using this method could reveal the presence of water and other life-giving molecules, showing us which worlds are closest to Earth on the planetary family tree.

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