Sunday, November 17, 2024

Physicists in cancer radiotherapy – Physics World

Physicists in cancer radiotherapy – Physics...

How studying fruit flies can help us understand congenital defects

When complex multicellular organisms grow and...

Where did the universe’s magnetic fields come from?

How the universe got its large...

This Week In Space podcast: Episode 137 — Strange New Worlds

NASAThis Week In Space podcast: Episode 137 — Strange New Worlds


Strange New Worlds – Kepler’s Legacy With Dr. Jason Steffen – YouTube


Watch On

On Episode 137 of This Week In Space, Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik talk with Dr. Jason Steffen, a professor of physics at UNLV and a member of the science team for the Kepler Space Telescope mission. This mission finally ended in 2018, but the discoveries keep coming. Kepler returned so much data that it was like “drinking from a firehose,” Jason tells us. 

As many know, Kepler made massive strides in identifying a couple thousand verified exoplanets in its 4-year prime mission, but less known is its amazing transition to the follow-on mission. When two of its reaction wheels (maneuvering devices) failed by 2013, NASA turned to the science team for advisement, and the K2 (Kepler 2) mission was born, seeking to continue the work by aiming the telescope in a given direction and using the pressure of solar wind on its solar panels to keep it oriented. 



Check out our other content

Most Popular Articles