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SPACE SCOPES
Researchers suggest new technique for ailing planet-hunting telescope
by Staff Writers
St. Andrews, Scotland (UPI) Jun 19, 2013


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

The mission of the planet-hunting Kepler space telescope, ended by mechanical ills, could resume using different search techniques, a Scottish researcher says.

Kepler, which has discovered 132 exoplanets and thousands of other candidate worlds, could still be used to seek out planets using a gravitational magnifying glass, Keith Horne of the University of St Andrews said.

Kepler has found exoplanets by observing stars and looking for tiny variations in starlight when a planet transits, or crosses in front of, its host star. So-called reaction wheels that allow Kepler to lock in on a star from long periods have failed, ending its ability to detect such transits.

Horne, working with Andrew Gould at Ohio State University, suggests Hubble could still use its instruments in an alternative way known as microlensing to spot planets.

When two distant stars align, the gravity field of the closer star bends and magnifies the light of the more distant star, and if the nearer star has orbiting planets, their gravity provides added magnification.

"The signals from planets are quite large in this case, sometimes even 100 percent change of brightness of the star, so it's relatively easy to see these things," Horne told NewScientist.com.

Horne and Gould said they estimate Kepler, though not specifically designed for microlensing, could find a few dozen exoplanets a year using the technique.

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SPACE SCOPES
Final curtain for Europe's deep-space telescope
Le Bourget, France (AFP) June 17, 2013
The deep-space telescope Herschel took its final bow on Monday, climaxing a successful four-year mission to observe the birth of stars and galaxies, the European Space Agency (ESA) said. The largest and most powerful infrared telescope in space, Herschel made over 35,000 scientific observations and amassed more than 25,000 hours of science data, it said. "Herschel has been turned off," E ... read more


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