Whenever you feel like things are just too tough, remember what K2 has been through. The space robot formerly known as Kepler should have been put out of commission by a 2013 hardware failure, but some genius engineering gave it a second life. Instead of joining the ranks of defunct
A broken telescope just discovered 104 new planets
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This artist's concept depicts select planetary discoveries made to date by NASA's Kepler space telescope. Photo / W. Stenzel, NASA, via Washington Post
Most of the "new planets" discovered by Kepler are just new analysis of data collected during Kepler's main mission. But the intrepid second mission occasionally has its own successes to celebrate.
Some of the haul's most interesting planets - a quad of potentially rocky worlds about the same size as Earth - wouldn't even have been found without K2's unique handicaps.
"Kepler's original mission observed a small patch of sky as it was designed to conduct a demographic survey of the different types of planets," Ian Crossfield, a Sagan Fellow at the University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, said in a statement. Crossfield is the lead author of the study announcing these newly confirmed worlds, published this week in Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. "This approach effectively meant that relatively few of the brightest, closest red dwarfs were included in Kepler's survey," he explained.
Because small, cool red dwarfs are so common in the galaxy (they make up about 75 percent of the local star population), scientists think they might be a good place to look for life. They're old - meaning that planets around them have had plenty of time to evolve life of some sort - and we have a lot of them close by.
"The K2 mission allows us to increase the number of small, red stars by a factor of 20, significantly increasing the number of astronomical 'movie stars' that make the best systems for further study," Crossfield said.
The M dwarf star K2-72, which sits 181 light years away, fits that description: It's just half the mass of our own sun and not as bright. But because the four could-be-rocky worlds discovered around it orbit so close, some of them might be in the star's habitable zone, the range in which liquid water could be found.
The planets were confirmed using follow-up observations from the North Gemini telescope and the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii, the Automated Planet Finder of the University of California Observatories and the Large Binocular Telescope operated by the University of Arizona. Like other K2 finds, these nearby worlds will make great study targets when NASA's much-anticipated James Webb Space Telescope launches in 2018.