An unmanned Nasa mission to search the sky for Earth-like planets with the potential to host life has launched from Cape Canaveral in Florida.
The Kepler telescope will orbit the Sun to watch a patch of space thought to contain about 100,000 stars like ours. It is the first mission capable of answering the age-old question: are other worlds like ours out there?
“It was just magnificent. It looked like a star was being formed in the sky,” said Bill Borucki, Kepler’s principal scientist.
“Everybody was delighted, everybody was screaming, ‘Go Kepler!”’ Kepler’s mission will last at least three and a half years and cost €480 million.
The goal is to find, if they exist, Earth-like planets circling stars in the so-called habitable zone - orbits where liquid water could be present on the surface of the planets.
That would mean there were lots of places out there for life to evolve, Dr Borucki said.
On the other hand, “if we don’t find any, it really means Earths are very rare, we might be the only extant life and, in fact, that will be the end of ‘Star Trek’.”
Once it is settled into an Earth-trailing orbit around the sun, Kepler will stare non-stop at 100,000 stars near the Cygnus and Lyra constellations, between 600 and 3,000 light years away.
The telescope will watch for any dimming, or winks, in the stellar brightness that might be caused by orbiting planets.
Astronomers already have found more than 300 planets orbiting other stars, but they are largely inhospitable gas giants like Jupiter. Kepler will be looking for smaller rocky planets akin to Earth.
Kepler is designed to find hundreds of Earth-like planets if they are common and, perhaps, dozens of them in the habitable zone, Mr Borucki said. The telescope is so powerful that from space, Nasa maintains, it could detect someone in a small town turning off a porch light at night.
It will not, however, be looking for signs of life. That is for future spacecraft.
Nasa was counting on a successful launch to offset the loss last week of the space agency’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory.
That environmental satellite ended up crashing into the Antarctic because of rocket failure. It was a different type of rocket than the one used for Kepler.
AP