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From Pixels to PlanetsThe Kepler Mission was launched in 2009 as NASAs first mission capable of finding Earth-size planets in the habitable zone of Sun-like stars. Its telescope consists of a 1.5-m primary mirror and a 0.95-m aperture. The 42 charge-coupled devices in its focal plane are read out every half hour, compressed, and then downlinked monthly. After four years, the second of four reaction wheels failed, ending the original mission. Back on earth, the Science Operations Center developed the Science Pipeline to analyze about 200,000 target stars in Keplers field of view, looking for evidence of periodic dimming suggesting that one or more planets had crossed the face of its host star. The Pipeline comprises several steps, from pixel-level calibration, through noise and artifact removal, to detection of transit-like signals and the construction of a suite of diagnostic tests to guard against false positives. The Kepler Science Pipeline consists of a pipeline infrastructure written in the Java programming language, which marshals data input to and output from MATLAB applications that are executed as external processes. The pipeline modules, which underwent continuous development and refinement even after data started arriving, employ several analytic techniques, many developed for the Kepler Project. Because of the large number of targets, the large amount of data per target and the complexity of the pipeline algorithms, the processing demands are daunting. Some pipeline modules require days to weeks to process all of their targets, even when run on NASA's 128-node Pleiades supercomputer. The software developers are still seeking ways to increase the throughput. To date, the Kepler project has discovered more than 4000 planetary candidates, of which more than 1000 have been independently confirmed or validated to be exoplanets. Funding for this mission is provided by NASAs Science Mission Directorate.
Document ID
20160001332
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Brownston, Lee
(SGT, Inc. Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Jenkins, Jon M.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
Date Acquired
February 2, 2016
Publication Date
July 7, 2015
Subject Category
Astronomy
Computer Programming And Software
Report/Patent Number
ARC-E-DAA-TN24545
Meeting Information
Meeting: IEEE International Conference on Autonomic Computing (ICAC) 2015
Location: Grenoble
Country: France
Start Date: July 7, 2015
End Date: July 10, 2015
Sponsors: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNA14AA60C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
supercomputers
Kepler mission
machine learning
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