Hey there,Emmanuelle – The Sex Lives Of Ghosts (2004) little star.
A new set of images taken by NASA's Kepler Space Telescope shows a faint, pixelated view of TRAPPIST-1, a small, dim star 40 light-years from Earth that plays host to at least seven Earth-sized worlds.
While the GIF showing the star's brightness isn't much to look at, it's worth its weight in scientific gold. It's also the public's first real look from Kepler at the exciting star system, which could be orbited by at least one habitable planet.
SEE ALSO: NASA gives out data about TRAPPIST-1 and its planets for free onlineBy carefully analyzing how the light of the star changes from one photo to the next, scientists can detect planets passing in front of the star from Kepler's perspective. The small dips in light caused by a transit allow researchers to characterize the planets orbiting the star, and learn more about the worlds' masses, sizes and orbits.
Via Giphy"An Earth-size planet passing in front of a small ultra-cool dwarf star like TRAPPIST-1 creates less than a one percent dip in brightness, and is not visible with the naked eye," NASA said in a statement.
The flickering of the pixels in the new animation aren't actually dips in the brightness of the star, according to NASA. Instead, those variations in light are caused by algorithms correcting for Kepler's movements in space. (Basically, whenever scientists use data from telescopes in space, they need to correct for whatever movements the telescope is making in order to parse out signal from noise.)
This animation -- which shows the photos taken once each minute for about an hour on Feb. 22 -- is just a small sampling of months of data collected by Kepler as it stared at TRAPPIST-1.
The space telescope took photos of the star system for 74 days from Dec. 15, 2016 through March 4.
The system is the first found with seven Earth-sized planets that might have a chance to support life.
At least a few of the worlds are thought to be in orbits that would allow them to support liquid water on their surfaces.
By and large, scientists want to study these worlds because they do qualify as some of the best possible places to search for alien life. Eventually, when more high-powered instruments launch to space in the coming years, researchers should be able to learn more about the planets' atmospheres and whether they're habitable.
We need that data too, because at the moment, it's unclear exactly what kind of environment these planets are facing.
TRAPPIST-1 is much smaller and dimmer than our sun, so actually pinpointing the habitable area of its orbit is difficult to do. Therefore, learning all we can about this star now could help us track its planets in the future.
This hot new boyband from China is made up entirely of girlsSan Francisco Pride's legal team rejects Google banNew Jersey halts police use of creepy Clearview AI facialThe West Indian manatee makes it out of the endangered zoneEverything coming to Netflix in February 2020It looks more and more like GM will release an electric Hummer5 weird Apple commercials from the '80s we can't stop watchingLoneliness can worsen common cold symptoms, so call me, k?Little girl photobombed by huge venomous snake'Racist' question on kid's homework sheet is angering peopleA simple reason why you should stay out of floodwaters in Australia: SharksGoogle Docs went down and everyone panickedIf you question J.K. Rowling's right to tweet politics, she will come for you"Chilling Adventures of Sabrina" Part 3 wins by going full "Riverdale"Kobe Bryant, 41, and his 13Suburbs already have driverless taxis, but San Francisco is still playing catchA simple reason why you should stay out of floodwaters in Australia: SharksGoogle announces I/O 2020 datesHulu's 'Shrill' disappoints with timid Season 2I'm obsessed with 'The Circle' and its ridiculous voice assistant Trump capping a pen with his tiny hands gets a huge Photoshop battle This country is raising $600 million to counter Trump's anti All the times the former president of Mexico shut down Trump's 'f*cking wall' A robotic NASA mission could help us mine asteroids in the future Online quiz helps undocumented immigrants find free legal help CNBC's Trump tweet alert is a new level of absurd Stellar pregnancy announcement features a dog wearing glasses NYT Connections hints and answers for June 23: Tips to solve 'Connections' #743. An NBA team's season of discontent boils over on Instagram Dog mom jumps into freezing water to save her fur baby President Trump is destroying Twitter A 'Devil Wears Prada' musical was just announced and Elton John is writing the music You can now point your phone at Japanese text and get an instant translation Father teaches his son the ABCs with a little help from trap music Twitter is burying Moments as it bets on live video Nvidia and AMD Keep Dropping GPU Prices After New Product Launches Flop Man cycles home only to realise he'd gone 310 miles in the wrong direction Fans are having a sexy good time with the new 'Mass Effect' trailer Joel Embiid's brilliant tweet tweaks Trump where it hurts after NBA All Trump’s political appointees will vet EPA’s scientific work before release
2.3691s , 10131.6484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Emmanuelle – The Sex Lives Of Ghosts (2004)】,Unobstructed Information Network