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Credit: Ball Aerospace,   
The Kepler Mission,   
NASA/Ames Research Center   
   
   
   
Explanation:
Observational astronomy has recently   
provided evidence of   
the existence of   
massive Jupiter-sized planets orbiting distant suns,   
protoplanetary disks of   
gas and dust   
surrounding newly formed stars, and   
planetary bodies orbiting exotic stellar corpses known as pulsars.   
   
Indeed, the formation of planets seems to be a   
broader and more varied phenomenon than previously imagined.   
   
Are there nearby solar systems with Earth-sized planets as well?   
Many would answer   
yes, but small, relatively low mass planets orbiting sunlike stars - which   
might be capable of supporting life - are extremely difficult to detect.   
   
One possible approach to   
this daunting observational problem is to regularly   
monitor the light from many solar-type stars, searching for the slight   
decrease in brightness which signals   
the transit of a small planet in front of the stellar disk.   
   
A proposal for a space-based   
instrument to engage in such a program,   
the Kepler Mission,   
is illustrated above.   
   
In this concept, the monitoring space telescope orbits the Sun,   
slowly drifting away from Earth.   
   
The goal of this mission would be to   
discover Earth-sized planets   
in the   
habitable zone of solar-type stars, taking   
a step toward answering the   
profound question   
   
- Does life exist on other worlds beyond our Solar System?   
   
   
   
   
   
Watch the Leonid Meteor Shower this weekend!
   
 Tomorrow's picture:  The Leonid Meteor Shower    
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NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
  