The last exoplanets observed by the Kepler Space Telescope, which retired in 2018 after its 9.5-year mission, have been discovered. Two confirmed and one planet candidate, these objects range in size from Earth to Neptune.
The last exoplanets observed by the Kepler Space Telescope, which retired in 2018 after its 9.5-year mission, have been discovered. Two confirmed and one planet candidate, these objects range in size from Earth to Neptune.
Kepler-1658b, the first exoplanet seen on its way to a deadly rendezvous with its star, spirals towards its end…
The planet named “Kepler-1658b”, detected by the Kepler Telescope in 2009, is approaching at great speed towards its orbiting star. The event caused by the increased energy of the star that has completed its life will result in the destruction of the planet. Kepler-1658b was a formalized planet after 10 years of work…
Astronomers continue their investigations based on data obtained by space telescopes to find new exoplanets and possible habitable planets …
As part of a study on exoplanets outside our solar system, researchers report that three celestial bodies that were previously classified …
More than 4,000 exoplanets have been discovered since 1995, when a planet like Earth was discovered orbiting a sun-like star. More than half of …
NASA’s first dedicated exoplanet-finding ‘hunter’, the Kepler Space Telescope, while in use, has observed hundreds of thousands of stars in …