NASA was yesterday to launch a US$337 million washing machine-sized spacecraft that aims to vastly expand humankind’s search for planets beyond our solar system, particularly closer, Earth-sized ones that might harbor life.
The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) was scheduled to launch yesterday at 6:32pm atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida.
Its main goal over the next two years is to scan more than 200,000 of the brightest stars for signs of planets circling them and causing a dip in brightness known as a transit.
NASA said it predicted that TESS would discover 20,000 exoplanets — or planets outside the solar system — including more than 50 Earth-sized planets and up to 500 planets less than twice the size of Earth.
“They are going to be orbiting the nearest, brightest stars,” Elisa Quintana, TESS scientist at NASA’s Goddard Spaceflight Center, told reporters on Sunday.
“We might even find planets that orbit stars that we can even see with the naked eye, so in the next few years we might even be able to walk outside and point at a star and know that it has a planet. This is the future,” she added.
Just a couple of decades ago, the notion of finding habitable planets — or any planets at all — was a mere fantasy, NASA astrophysics division director Paul Hertz said.
“Humans have wondered forever whether we were alone in the universe, and until 25 years ago, the only planets we knew about were the eight in our own solar system,” he told reporters on the eve of the TESS launch. “But since then, we have found thousands of planets orbiting others stars and we think all the stars in our galaxy must have their own family of planets.”
TESS is designed as a follow-up to the US space agency’s Kepler spacecraft, which was the first of its kind and launched in 2009. The aging spacecraft is low on fuel and near the end of its life.
Kepler found a massive trove of exoplanets by focusing on one patch of sky, which contained about 150,000 stars like the sun.
The Kepler mission found 2,300 confirmed exoplanets and thousands more candidate planets, but many were too distant and dim to study further.
TESS, with its four advanced cameras, is to scan an area that is 350 times larger, comprising 85 percent of the sky, in the first two years alone.
“By looking at such a large section of the sky — this kind of stellar real estate — we open up the ability to cherry-pick the best stars to do follow-up science,” said Jenn Burt, a postdoctoral fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “On average the stars that TESS observes are 30 to 100 times brighter and 10 times closer than the stars that Kepler focused on.”
TESS uses the same method as Kepler for finding potential planets by tracking the dimming of light when a celestial body passes in front of a star.
The next step is for ground-based and space telescopes to peer even closer.
The Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space Telescope, scheduled to launch in 2020, should be able to reveal more about planets’ mass, density and the makeup of their atmosphere — all clues to habitability.
“TESS forms a bridge from what we have learned about exoplanets to date and where we are headed in the future,” TESS project manager Jeff Volosin said.
By focusing on planets dozens to hundreds of light-years way, TESS might enable breakthroughs, he said.
“With the hope that someday, in the next decades, we will be able to identify the potential for life to exist outside the solar system,” he said.
Weather was expected to be 80 percent favorable for launch.
Nearly half of China’s major cities are suffering “moderate to severe” levels of subsidence, putting millions of people at risk of flooding, especially as sea levels rise, according to a study of nationwide satellite data released yesterday. The authors of the paper, published by the journal Science, found that 45 percent of China’s urban land was sinking faster than 3mm per year, with 16 percent at more than 10mm per year, driven not only by declining water tables, but also the sheer weight of the built environment. With China’s urban population already in excess of 900 million people, “even a small portion
UNSETTLING IMAGES: The scene took place in front of TV crews covering the Trump trial, with a CNN anchor calling it an ‘emotional and unbelievably disturbing moment’ A man who doused himself in an accelerant and set himself on fire outside the courthouse where former US president Donald Trump is on trial has died, police said yesterday. The New York City Police Department (NYPD) said the man was declared dead by staff at an area hospital. The man was in Collect Pond Park at about 1:30pm on Friday when he took out pamphlets espousing conspiracy theories, tossed them around, then doused himself in an accelerant and set himself on fire, officials and witnesses said. A large number of police officers were nearby when it happened. Some officers and bystanders rushed
Beijing is continuing to commit genocide and crimes against humanity against Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in its western Xinjiang province, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a report published on Monday, ahead of his planned visit to China this week. The State Department’s annual human rights report, which documents abuses recorded all over the world during the previous calendar year, repeated language from previous years on the treatment of Muslims in Xinjiang, but the publication raises the issue ahead of delicate talks, including on the war in Ukraine and global trade, between the top U.S. diplomat and Chinese
HYPOCRISY? The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday asked whether Biden was talking about China or the US when he used the word ‘xenophobic’ US President Joe Biden on Wednesday called for a hike in steel tariffs on China, accusing Beijing of cheating as he spoke at a campaign event in Pennsylvania. Biden accused China of xenophobia, too, in a speech to union members in Pittsburgh. “They’re not competing, they’re cheating. They’re cheating and we’ve seen the damage here in America,” Biden said. Chinese steel companies “don’t need to worry about making a profit because the Chinese government is subsidizing them so heavily,” he said. Biden said he had called for the US Trade Representative to triple the tariff rates for Chinese steel and aluminum if Beijing was