The Kepler Space Telescope has revolutionized our understanding of exoplanets, or worlds orbiting other stars. It’s been the most successful planet-hunter by far, so far discovering thousands of exoplanets since 2009, with the promise of more to come. On May 23, 2018, NASA announced that Kepler has now begun the 18th observing campaign of its extended K2 mission. The campaign began on May 12, and will continue for 82 days; during that time, Kepler will focus on a variety of cosmic objects, including nearby star clusters, an infamous near-Earth asteroid called 99942 Apophis, and an exotic blazer in the distant universe called OJ 287.

This campaign covers some old ground as it were, since it focuses on almost exactly the same patch of sky as Kepler’s Campaign 5 in 2015. NASA explained:

One of the advantages of observing a field over again is that [exoplanets] may be found orbiting farther from their stars. Astronomers hope to not only discover new exoplanets during this campaign, but also to confirm candidates that were previously identified.

Indeed, to date, most exoplanets discovered by Kepler do orbit close to their stars, as they have been the easiest for the spacecraft’s observing system to detect.

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One of the objects Kepler is observing in this campaign is familiar to stargazers. It is Messier 44, aka Praesepe or the Beehive, located in the direction of the constellation Cancer the Crab. This is an open star cluster, like the one in which our sun is thought to have been born. Six exoplanets have already been discovered orbiting stars in the Beehive.

Kepler will also be observing Messier 67, sometimes called the King Cobra cluster, another open star cluster in Cancer.

Open clusters including Messier 67 and Messier 44 are regions where stars formed at roughly the same time. Thus, as we gaze toward these stars, we see them as approximately the same age. Kepler will be looking for exoplanets that are transiting, or crossing, in front of these stars as seen from Earth.

Kepler will have an opportunity during its 18th K2 campaign to peer toward the infamous asteroid 99942 Apophis. This near-Earth asteroid – about 1,000 feet or 300 meters in diameter – caused a stir back in 2004, when early observations of its orbit suggested a small probability (up to 2.7 percent) that it would hit Earth on April 13, 2029.

Further observations showed Apophis would pass within 20,000 miles (32,000 km) of Earth in the year 2029, but not strike us. As NASA said:

… close but still comfortably far enough to not pose any danger to Earthlings.

Although the probability that Apophis will strike us in 2029 is now calculated at zero, astronomers are still looking at future passes, and this near-Earth asteroid remains one of the most interesting objects out there.

But – as it gazes toward its small section of space – Kepler won’t be looking only at nearby objects. It will also be looking at blazars, the energetic nuclei of very distant galaxies with massive black holes in their centers. One such target is OJ 287, where two black holes are in orbit around each other. One of these black hole is 18 billion times the mass of our sun! That’s in contrast to the 4-million-solar-mass black hole at the center of our home galaxy, the Milky Way.

So this new observing campaign will be an exciting new chapter in Kepler’s K2 mission, and in the Kepler mission overall, which, unfortunately, will be coming to an end soon. The telescope is running out of fuel, with probably only several months left.

By the way, it’s in many ways amazing we’ve had a K2 or extended mission. Kepler’s primary mission ended in 2013 after a second reaction wheel broke. That wheel was used to help the spacecraft remain steady with a fixed gaze on its targets, and, without it, Kepler could not do its work. Later, NASA scientists were able to fix the problem – partially and, as always, cleverly – by using pressure from sunlight to help Kepler maintain position. This new phase is the extended K2 mission, and it was estimated that 10 observing campaigns would be possible with the remaining fuel.

That estimate turned out to be too conservative, with Kepler now entering its 18th observing campaign during K2. A fantastic achievement, but unfortunately there is nothing that can be done about the fuel problem. As Charlie Sobeck, a system engineer for the Kepler mission, explained in a NASA statement:

Our current estimates are that Kepler’s tank will run dry within several months – but we’ve been surprised by its performance before! So, while we anticipate flight operations ending soon, we are prepared to continue as long as the fuel allows. The Kepler team is planning to collect as much science data as possible in its remaining time and beam it back to Earth before the loss of the fuel-powered thrusters means that we can’t aim the spacecraft for data transfer. We even have plans to take some final calibration data with the last bit of fuel, if the opportunity presents itself.

Kepler, by the way, already has a replacement. The TESS planet-hunter was launched in April 2018.

Bottom line: Kepler has already discovered thousands of exoplanets during its mission, of many different types, and now, during its 18th observing campaign, it should be able to find even more, as well as provide unique views of many other cosmic objects and phenomena. Even as the mission is now nearing its end, the hobbled spacecraft continues to collect as much science data as it possibly can – a fitting finale for a spacecraft which has opened wide our views of these other worlds.

Via NASA

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