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By Alex Antunes | April 17th 2009 10:34 AM | 8 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Alex Antunes

In "The Sky By Day", Dr. Alex Antunes serves twice-weekly slices of life from the sometimes strange, sometimes oddly normal workday of a NASA astrophysicist. Readers get the inside scoop on what... Full Bio


Kepler has First Light. It is On! Team is a Go! Photons are Arriving!

This provocativly-titled NASA release states "NASA's Kepler Captures First Views of Planet-Hunting Territory", and has a good explanation of Kepler's capabilities. What I wish to tackle is why Kepler matters.

Kepler is a new space telescope with an awesomely wide field of view, seeing a huge 100 square degrees in a single frame, then zooming in closer with two other 'scopes. It is primarily a planet-hunting mission, but there will be much good science coming from Kepler-- some of which we can't even imagine yet.


Kepler zoom-inKepler zoomed-in

In an earlier rant I decried overuse of the term 'first', but first light events are indeed worthy of their name. Rocket science is hard, and every satellite is a tiny bundle of risks tossed into harsh vacuum. You never know whether the instruments will function, and (if you aren't HST) there isn't a handy space engineer able to do repairs.

So first light means either "it worked" or "we're screwed". In the five satellite telescope missions I've worked on, there has always been two tension points. Did it launch, and do we have first light? With my most recent, STEREO, there were actually 16 'first lights', since each of the 2 satellites held 8 detectors. All worked, and our emotions shifted from 'will anything work' fear, to 'we have a mission!', to 'holy cannoli, we're 100%'! Fun excitement.

David Koch, Deputy PI for Kepler, had this apt analogy.  It's "kind of like walking down the aisle".  You are anxious even though you know what will happen.  He's been with 4 missions, each a success, and still first light is an anxious yet confident moment.  He doesn't cross his fingers, as "crossed fingers kind of implies I _hope_ it opens", and these systems are indeed well-built, with redundancy.

Kepler has a very wide field of view, and like all NASA missions, the data quickly goes public. So anyone with interest can repurpose Kepler for their own task. Much as the solar mission SOHO became a great comet-hunter, Kepler will no doubt aid asteroid-hunters, survey fans, tracers of variable stars, and a host of others, professional and amateur. Astronomy remains one of the few sciences where amateurs can and do make significant contributions.

So Kepler has three significant uses from the get-go:
  1. Planet-hunting
  2. Pretty pictures
  3. Unexplored science potential

Which is more informative-- the Kepler picture above, or the statement "The area pictured is 0.2 percent of Kepler's full field of view, and shows hundreds of stars in the constellation Lyra." (NASA caption)? The words carry information and are useful, but they do not capture 'the story' as well as the image. And together, you get both the experiential and the precise.

So images are crucial to astronomy, not just to keep the public interested, but to accurately present the context and meaning of the work in a broad sense. Add in words, and you have a story. Add in science, and you gain meaning.  And, with luck, some Keplerific discoveries.

Comments

Hank's picture
I just like the title; it reads like a Japanese cartoon.    Super Robot Monkey Team Hyperforce Go!

All your planet hunting are belong to us (c0ntext, for the culturally unaware, and the video)

P.S.  Though I bet people like me are more excited about this than you might think, press release or not.

antunes's picture
Yes, I originally went more with the cartoon theme including a Kepler team member who "could play Princess in a G-Force movie", but I don't have all the quotes yet.  Wait for part 2.

Getting quotes from this has taken longer than expected, mostly because I'm used to getting quotes in < 1 hour, so 3+ hour waits and needing PAO permission can be frustrating in the instant-on world of blogging.

And despite my low-key tone, I think Kepler is basically the new HST in terms of coolness and capability, moreso than JWST, perhaps.

p.s. I just backfilled in quotes from deputy PI David Koch, under a 90 minute turnaround so that was a plus.  I'll backfill other quotes this afternoon as they arrive.

Viewing from school, I like this very much but I've got to get to homeroom.

rholley's picture
Now I'm going to have one of Robert's rants.

Second: why didn't you tell us that it is NGC 6791?  (I got this from the image URL.)  As the Wikipedia link I have just given will show, this is a most interesting cluster.

First: as a microscopist, I want a scale bar!  (waa-waa!)  That would tell us how big it appears.  But perhaps that's a complaint better directed at naughty NASA.



antunes's picture
> as a microscopist, I want a scale bar!  (waa-waa!)

I totally agree.  I was at the class taught by Edward Tufte last month and he, also, dinged NASA for failing to include scale bars on their images.

But perhaps there was a scale bar there... I think they overlaid one Earth on it for reference in the picture.  Pity there's not a microscopist in the house to verify... just search the image and look for something planet-sized...

Alex, the daytime astronomer (twitter: @skyday)

Not to throw cold water, but I want to correct the impression left by this article. Point 2: pretty pictures, unfortunately will not be a product of Kepler. The "full-frame" images are only rarely taken, the normal data download is little squares around each target star (due to downlink limitations). So there will be no asteroid hunting, and this is no competition for HST's wonderful pictures. It IS a great way to find terrestrial planets, and that will be its legacy (along with the "scientific surprises" that we still don't know about).

antunes's picture
Hi Kepler scientist,

> pretty pictures, unfortunately will not be a product of Kepler. The "full-frame" images are only rarely taken

This is a pity.  That nixes asteroids and tracking variable stars.  Although Kepler points a bit high on the ecliptic for most asteroid hunting, I was hoping for the possibility as a serendipitous result.  Still, I'll be the first to admit hopes don't beat out telemetry limits.

As long as I have you on the line, will there be enough downlink capability to do an equivalent to Hubble's Deep Field images?

Curious,
Alex

Come and celebrate the International Year of Astronomy with Stargazer, a film from Stan Neumann, and find out more about astronomy and Kepler’s adventures! This film needs your help to begin shooting. Learn more on : http://www.touscoprod.com/pages/projet/fiche.php?s_id=5097&s_wbg_menu=4

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