NASA Kepler mission: Now know more about TRAPPIST-1, recently-discovered star hosting potentially habitable Earth-size planets

Remember TRAPPIST-1, the ultra-cool dwarf star that was discovered recently? Well, NASA’s Kepler mission has more information in store about the star that hosts potentially habitable Earth-size planets 40-light years away.

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Bindiya Bhatt
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NASA Kepler mission: Now know more about TRAPPIST-1, recently-discovered star hosting potentially habitable Earth-size planets

NASA Kepler mission: More information about TRAPPIST-1 ultra-cool dwarf star revealed

Remember TRAPPIST-1, the ultra-cool dwarf star that was discovered recently? Well, NASA’s Kepler mission has more information in store about the star that hosts potentially habitable Earth-size planets 40-light years away.

Astronomers had on February 22 declared that TRAPPIST-1 hosts no less than seven planets that may be rocky. NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope in combination with ground-based telescopes had made the discovery.

NASA’s Kepler spacecraft operates as the K2 mission and between December 15 and March 4 it has gathered data on star’s minuscule changes in brightness due to transiting planets.

With the new information, astronomers are expected to refine the previous measurements of the six planets, pin down the orbital period and mass of the seventh and farthest planet, TRAPPIST-1h, and learn more about the magnetic activity of the host star.

“Scientists and enthusiasts around the world are invested in learning everything they can about these Earth-size worlds,” said Geert Barentsen, K2 research scientist at NASA’s Ames Research Centre in California.

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“Providing the K2 raw data as quickly as possible was a priority to give investigators an early look so they could best define their follow-up research plans. We’re thrilled that this will also allow the public to witness the process of discovery,” said Barentsen.

NASA said that the raw and uncalibrated data will help astronomers in preparing proposals due this month to use telescopes on the Earth to further probe TRAPPIST-1.

NASA further said that the routine processing of the data will be finished by late May and the fully calibrated data will be made available at the public archive.

The observation period, known as K2 Campaign 12, provides 74 days of monitoring.

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This is the longest, nearly continuous set of observations of TRAPPIST-1 yet, and provides researchers with an opportunity to further study the gravitational interaction between the seven planets, and search for planets that may remain undiscovered in the system.

During Campaign 12, a cosmic ray event reset the spacecraft’s onboard software causing a five-day break in science data collection, NASA said.

The benign event is the fourth occurrence of cosmic ray susceptibility since launch in March 2009. The spacecraft remains healthy and is operating nominally.

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“We were lucky that the K2 mission was able to observe TRAPPIST-1,” said Michael Haas, science office director for the Kepler and K2 missions at Ames.

“The observing field for Campaign 12 was set when the discovery of the first planets orbiting TRAPPIST-1 was announced, and the science community had already submitted proposals for specific targets of interest in that field,” said Haas. 

(With inputs from PTI)

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