Kepler Exoplanet Mission!-hearttouch0929
Kepler Exoplanet Mission!
When you hear the name Exoplanet, many different planets come to mind. Someone may go to the realm of imagination! There is also a lot of curiosity among astronomers about exoplanets.
Astronomers are also always obsessed with research on exoplanets. He also sent many space probe telescopes into space at different times to discover exoplanets.
So first let's say what is exoplanet. The planets in the solar system are called exoplanets. There is no end to the research of scientists going on exoplanets. Exoplanet missions are very exciting to find out if there are any living beings in this universe besides the creatures of the earth! Exoplanets are also studied to find out the nature, structure, etc. of other planets in the universe.
So far, many space telescopes have been sent to find new exoplanets. The Kepler Space Telescope is one of them.
Named after astronomer Jonathan Kepler, the space telescope was launched by NASA on March 7, 2009, from the Cape Canaveral Space Center in Florida on a Delta-2 rocket.
The Kepler space telescope was originally launched to find an exoplanet almost identical to Earth. The telescope also makes a great contribution to finding habitable zonal enriched exoplanets. The mission also surveyed the number of stars in the Milky Way galaxy orbiting the exoplanet. The lifespan of the Kepler space satellite mission was about 3 and a half years. Later, however, the term was extended.
As of January 2015, the Kepler Space Telescope has detected 1,013 and 440 star systems.
How do Kepler telescopes find exoplanets?
The Kepler Space Telescope basically detects exoplanets using transit or transit methods. If a planet passes over a star, it is called a transit. During this passage, the little light of the star is interrupted by the planet. An idea of the planet is obtained by analyzing how this light is obstructed. The Kepler Space Telescope has also discovered more than a thousand exoplanets using this method.
Lacking fuel, the Kepler satellite telescope is slowly dying. However, in the history of cosmic travel, the Kepler Telescope must have been written in golden letters ........!


No comments