NASA's reborn Kepler mission makes first exoplanet discovery

WASHINGTON, Dec. 18 (UPI) -- After a year on the proverbial bench, Kepler is back in the game seeking out alien worlds; and for the first time since it was sidelined, scientists confirmed a new exoplanet located by the probe.

In the spring of 2013, NASA's Kepler probe began spinning out of control after its wheeled image-stabilization mechanism broke. With only two of its four wheels in working condition, its mission was retired.

Without the ability to fix its gaze on specific points in space, Kepler was pretty useless as a recorder of optical data and searcher of exoplanets.

But earlier this year, engineers at NASA figured out a way to rig the probing observatory so that the pressure of the sun's rays pinned it into a stable position. After testing proved their troubleshooting had worked, NASA approved funding for another Kepler mission -- K2.

"Last summer, the possibility of a scientifically productive mission for Kepler after its reaction wheel failure in its extended mission was not part of the conversation," Paul Hertz, NASA's astrophysics division director, said in a recent press release. "Today, thanks to an innovative idea and lots of hard work by the NASA and Ball Aerospace team, Kepler may well deliver the first candidates for follow-up study by the James Webb Space Telescope to characterize the atmospheres of distant worlds and search for signatures of life."

The handicapped probe can only work for 80 days at a time, but it has since completed two scientific campaigns. Scientists are just now parsing the data returned from the first campaign, as Kepler begins its third K2 campaign.

While being tested, Kepler collected data that revealed the existence of an exoplanet more than twice the size of Earth. Planet HIP 116454b orbits a small, cool star found 180 light-years away in the constellation Pisces. Planet HIP 116454b is likely much too cold to support life.

"The Kepler mission showed us that planets larger in size than Earth and smaller than Neptune are common in the galaxy, yet they are absent in our solar system," said Steve Howell, lead scientist on the Kepler/K2 mission. "K2 is uniquely positioned to dramatically refine our understanding of these alien worlds and further define the boundary between rocky worlds like Earth and ice giants like Neptune."

Keppler has helped discover more than 1,700 new alien worlds since it was launched in 2009.

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NASA's reborn Kepler mission makes first exoplanet discovery

NASA: Christmas lights make cities glow brighter from space during holidays

When you tell your neighbors that their"Frozen" Christmas displaycan be seen from space, you won't be lying.

Nighttime lights around major U.S. cities shine 20 to 50 percent brighter during Christmas and New Year's compared to the rest of the year, according to NASA.

Lights start getting brighter on Black Friday and continue through New Year's Day, saidMiguel Romn, a scientist from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Centre, Maryland.

Scientists at the centre examined light output from 70 U.S. cities in 2012 and 2013.

"When we started looking at the data at night over the United States, we were expecting to see a lot of stability in the night time lights," Romn says in a video released by NASA. "We were surprised to see there is a vibrant increase in activity during the holidays, particularly around areas in the suburbs."

Lights in some Middle Eastern cities shine more than 50 percent brighter during Ramadan, according to NASA.

Scroll through to see what your lights look like from space.

jfechter@mysa.com

Twitter: @JFreports

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NASA's Curiosity Mars rover to star in Discovery Channel documentary

For those following all thehabitability results from the Curiosity roverlately, heres a special treat the Discovery Channel will air a behind-the-scenes documentary on the mission tonight (Dec. 18) at 10 p.m. Eastern.

Called Red Planet Rover, it promises to bring viewers behind the scenes of the mission, experiencing the ups and downs of the expedition through the eyes of the science team and from the perspective of the Curiosity rover itself, according to the press release.

Universe Today is also proud to announce that several Curiosity mosaics processed by our own Ken Kremer and his imaging partner Marco Di Lorenzo will be featured in the documentary.

Heres some additional info on the show via the Discovery Channel:

NASAs Curiosity was sent to solve one of the greatest mysteries of science did life ever exist on Mars? Its an audacious mission with no margin for error. And like most things, making history hasnt been easy. The Curiosity rover mission marks the beginning of what may only be the beginning to the story of life on Mars. Curiosity looks to uncover how Mars evolved over billions of years. Was it once and could it be now habitable for life?

Bombarded by radiation, Mars surface is cold, dry and lethal. But it wasnt always this way. Billions of years ago, life might have had a chance. Of all the planets in the solar system, only two have been in liquid form at some time: Earth and Mars. Both were enriched by all the chemicals necessary to create human form.

Check your local listings for detailed information.

Elizabeth Howellis the senior writer at Universe Today. She also works for Space.com, Space Exploration Network, the NASA Lunar Science Institute, NASA Astrobiology Magazine and LiveScience, among others. Career highlights include watching three shuttle launches, and going on a two-week simulated Mars expedition in rural Utah. You can follow her on Twitter@howellspaceor contact her ather website.

Originally published on Universe Today.

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NASA's Curiosity Mars rover to star in Discovery Channel documentary

NASAs Kepler finds new exoplanet

The artistic concept shows NASA's planet-hunting Kepler spacecraft operating in a new mission profile called K2. Using publicly available data, astronomers have confirmed K2's first exoplanet discovery proving Kepler can still find planets. (Credit: NASA Ames/JPL-Caltech/T Pyle)

Provided by Felicia Chou, NASA

NASAs planet-hunting Kepler spacecraft makes a comeback with the discovery of the first exoplanet found using its new mission K2.

The discovery was made when astronomers and engineers devised an ingenious way to repurpose Kepler for the K2 mission and continue its search of the cosmos for other worlds.

Last summer, the possibility of a scientifically productive mission for Kepler after its reaction wheel failure in its extended mission was not part of the conversation, said Paul Hertz, NASAs astrophysics division director at the agencys headquarters in Washington. Today, thanks to an innovative idea and lots of hard work by the NASA and Ball Aerospace team, Kepler may well deliver the first candidates for follow-up study by the James Webb Space Telescope to characterize the atmospheres of distant worlds and search for signatures of life.

Lead researcher Andrew Vanderburg, a graduate student at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, studied publicly available data collected by the spacecraft during a test of K2 in February 2014. The discovery was confirmed with measurements taken by the HARPS-North spectrograph of the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo in the Canary Islands, which captured the wobble of the star caused by the planets gravitational tug as it orbits.

The newly confirmed planet, HIP 116454b, is 2.5 times the diameter of Earth and follows a close, nine-day orbit around a star that is smaller and cooler than our sun, making the planet too hot for life as we know it. HIP 116454b and its star are 180 light-years from Earth, toward the constellation Pisces.

Keplers onboard camera detects planets by looking for transits when a distant star dims slightly as a planet crosses in front of it. The smaller the planet, the weaker the dimming, so brightness measurements must be exquisitely precise. To enable that precision, the spacecraft must maintain steady pointing. In May 2013, data collection during Keplers extended prime mission came to an end with the failure of the second of four reaction wheels, which are used to stabilize the spacecraft.

Rather than giving up on the stalwart spacecraft, a team of scientists and engineers crafted a resourceful strategy to use pressure from sunlight as a virtual reaction wheel to help control the spacecraft. The resulting K2 mission promises to not only continue Keplers planet hunt, but also to expand the search to bright nearby stars that harbor planets that can be studied in detail and better understand their composition. K2 also will introduce new opportunities to observe star clusters, active galaxies and supernovae.

Small planets like HIP 116454b, orbiting nearby bright stars, are a scientific sweet spot for K2 as they are good prospects for follow-up ground studies to obtain mass measurements. Using K2s size measurements and ground-based mass measurements, astronomers can calculate the density of a planet to determine whether it is likely a rocky, watery or gaseous world.

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NASAs Kepler finds new exoplanet

NASAs New Orion Spacecraft Completes First Spaceflight Test

Major Milestone on Agency's Journey to Mars

[image-50]

NASA marked a major milestone Friday on its journey to Mars as the Orion spacecraft completed its first voyage to space, traveling farther than any spacecraft designed for astronauts has been in more than 40 years.

Todays flight test of Orion is a huge step for NASA and a really critical part of our work to pioneer deep space on our Journey to Mars, said NASA Administrator Charles Bolden. The teams did a tremendous job putting Orion through its paces in the real environment it will endure as we push the boundary of human exploration in the coming years. [image-69]

Orion blazed into the morning sky at 7:05 a.m. EST, lifting off from Space Launch Complex 37 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida on a United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket. The Orion crew module splashed down approximately 4.5 hours later in the Pacific Ocean, 600 miles southwest of San Diego.

During the uncrewed test, Orion traveled twice through the Van Allen belt where it experienced high periods of radiation, and reached an altitude of 3,600 miles above Earth. Orion also hit speeds of 20,000 mph and weathered temperatures approaching 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit as it entered Earths atmosphere.

Orion will open the space between Earth and Mars for exploration by astronauts. This proving ground will be invaluable for testing capabilities future human Mars missions will need. The spacecraft was tested in space to allow engineers to collect critical data to evaluate its performance and improve its design. The flight tested Orions heat shield, avionics, parachutes, computers and key spacecraft separation events, exercising many of the systems critical to the safety of astronauts who will travel in Orion. [image-96]

On future missions, Orion will launch on NASAs Space Launch System (SLS) heavy-lift rocket currently being developed at the agencys Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. A 70 metric-ton (77 ton) SLS will send Orion to a distant retrograde orbit around the moon on Exploration Mission-1 in the first test of the fully integrated Orion and SLS system.

We really pushed Orion as much as we could to give us real data that we can use to improve Orions design going forward, said Mark Geyer, Orion Program manager. In the coming weeks and months well be taking a look at that invaluable information and applying lessons learned to the next Orion spacecraft already in production for the first mission atop the Space Launch System rocket.

A team of NASA, U.S. Navy and Lockheed Martin personnel aboard the USS Anchorage are in the process of recovering Orion and will return it to U.S. Naval Base San Diego in the coming days. Orion will then be delivered to NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida, where it will be processed. The crew module will be refurbished for use in Ascent Abort-2 in 2018, a test of Orions launch abort system.

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Study Finds Earths Ocean Abyss Has Not Warmed – NASA …

Study Finds Earths Ocean Abyss Has Not Warmed

Oct. 6, 2014: The cold waters of Earths deep ocean have not warmed measurably since 2005, according to a new NASA study, leaving unsolved the mystery of why global warming appears to have slowed in recent years.

Scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, analyzed satellite and direct ocean temperature data from 2005 to 2013 and found the ocean abyss below 1.24 miles (1,995 meters) has not warmed measurably. Study coauthor Josh Willis of JPL said these findings do not throw suspicion on climate change itself.

"The sea level is still rising," Willis noted. "We're just trying to understand the nitty-gritty details."

In the 21st century, greenhouse gases have continued to accumulate in the atmosphere, just as they did in the 20th century, but global average surface air temperatures have stopped rising in tandem with the gases. The temperature of the top half of the world's oceans -- above the 1.24-mile mark -- is still climbing, but not fast enough to account for the stalled air temperatures.

Many processes on land, air and sea have been invoked to explain what is happening to the "missing" heat. One of the most prominent ideas is that the bottom half of the ocean is taking up the slack, but supporting evidence is slim. This latest study is the first to test the idea using satellite observations, as well as direct temperature measurements of the upper ocean. Scientists have been taking the temperature of the top half of the ocean directly since 2005, using a network of 3,000 floating temperature probes called the Argo array.

"The deep parts of the ocean are harder to measure," said JPL's William Llovel, lead author of the study published Sunday in the journal Nature Climate Change. "The combination of satellite and direct temperature data gives us a glimpse of how much sea level rise is due to deep warming. The answer is -- not much."

The study took advantage of the fact that water expands as it gets warmer. The sea level is rising because of this expansion and the water added by glacier and ice sheet melt.

To arrive at their conclusion, the JPL scientists did a straightforward subtraction calculation, using data for 2005-2013 from the Argo buoys, NASA's Jason-1 and Jason-2 satellites, and the agencys Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellites. From the total amount of sea level rise, they subtracted the amount of rise from the expansion in the upper ocean, and the amount of rise that came from added meltwater. The remainder represented the amount of sea level rise caused by warming in the deep ocean.

The remainder was essentially zero. Deep ocean warming contributed virtually nothing to sea level rise during this period.

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Study Finds Earths Ocean Abyss Has Not Warmed - NASA ...

NASA spent $394M to build giant unused tower

By Matt Cantor

Newser

This April 17, 2009 image, released by NASA, shows the massive A-3 engine test stand steel structure jutting into the sky at the Stennis Space Center in Hancock County, Miss.(AP Photo/NASA, Danny Nowlin)

Four years ago, NASA knew it wouldn't likely use a giant tower originally intended to test rocketsbecause the testing program was canceled. Yet the agency kept building the A-3 test stand and finally finished the $349 million project in June.

And the costs keep coming, with the Mississippi structure expected to require $700,000 each year in maintenance, the Washington Post reports. "You lock the door, so nobody gets in and hurts themselves," says the project's former boss.

Now, the tower is a giant ode to an agency that has lost its "sense of purpose," David A. Fahrenthold writes: "There's no 'why'" at NASA these days, says its former No. 2.

The test stand, near Gulfport, was once expected to send people back to the moon and to Mars, at a projected cost of $119 million. But costs kept rising, and with plans to get back to the moon looking less achievable, President Obama in 2010 called for an end to the program, dubbed "Constellation," that included the tower.

But the Senate, in an effort fueled by Mississippi Republican Roger Wicker, voted to continue funding the construction. "When it comes down to their pork, theyre always going to defend it," a space policy expert told Bloomberg early this year in a piece that dubbed the stand "useless." Even now, to actually use the stand would require a few more years' work, says a NASA official.

It's one of seven stands currently "mothballed," with another being renovated nearby. (In other space news, NASA has an "oh my gosh" moment.)

This article originally appeared on Newser: NASA Wasted $349M on 'Ghost Tower'

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NASA spent $394M to build giant unused tower

California Needs 11 Trillion Gallons to End Drought: NASA

Eleven trillion gallons that's the amount of water that NASA scientists say would be needed to replenish key California river basins in what they're calling the first-ever estimate of the water necessary to end an episode of drought. That 11 trillion gallons is the deficit in normal seasonal levels that NASA said a team found earlier this year in the Sacramento and San Joaquin river basins, using Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellites. The GRACE data, presented Tuesday at the American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco, showed those river basins losing about 4 trillion gallons per year more than state residents use annually, NASA said.

In another finding, NASA said airborne measuring indicates the Sierra Nevada range snowpack was half previous estimates. "The 2014 snowpack was one of the three lowest on record and the worst since 1977, when California's population was half what it is now," Airborne Snow Observatory principal investigator Tom Painter of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory said in the NASA release.

California has been blasted by autumn storms dumping inches of much-needed rain - but that's still not enough to get the Golden State out of its drought. "Recent rains are no reason to let up on our conservation efforts," Felicia Marcus, chair of the State Water Resources Control Board, said recently.

First published December 16 2014, 1:21 PM

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Life on Mars? NASA rover spots ingredients.

San Francisco NASA's Mars rover Curiosity has found organic chemicals the carbon-containing building blocks of life on the Red Planet.

The discovery is not evidence that life exists, or has ever existed, onMars, researchers stressed. But it does mark the first time that organics have been confirmed inside Red Planet rocks, and it checks off a chief goal of the rover team.

"This is really a great moment for the mission," Curiosity project scientist John Grotzinger, of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, said during a news conference Tuesday (Dec. 16) here at the annual fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU). [The Search for Life on Mars in Photos]

The rover's Sample Analysis at Mars instrument (SAM) detected chlorobenzene and several other chlorine-containing carbon compounds in samples from a rock called "Cumberland," which Curiosity drilled into in May 2013.

SAM uses a tiny oven to cook samples, and then analyzes the gases that waft off. Martian soil and rocks commonly host a chlorine-containing chemical called perchlorate, which can destroy or alter organics during this heating process a fact that has complicated Curiosity's hunt for life's building blocks.

In late 2012, for example, mission scientists announced that SAM hadspotted simple chlorinated organicsin samples taken from a different site, called "Rocknest." But they have since determined that this earlier detection probably picked up carbon carried to Mars within SAM.

That's not the case with the more complex chlorobenzene, dichloroethane, dichloropropane and dichlorobutane discovered inside the Cumberland sample, researchers said.

"This is the first in situ detection of organics that are from Mars samples," Caroline Freissinet, of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, told Space.com. Freissinet is lead author of the paper detailing the Cumberland results, which has been submitted to the Journal of Geophysical Research.

The apparent ubiquity of perchlorate on Mars makes it tough to know if the original Cumberland sample contained chlorobenzene and the other chlorinated compounds, or some other types of organics. Freissinet, however, is leaning toward the latter explanation.

"Everything is Martian the chlorine and the carbon but it's from two different molecules, and it mixed together in the SAM oven," she said.

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Life on Mars? NASA rover spots ingredients.

NASA Rover Finds Mysterious Methane Emissions on Mars

New results suggest evidence for extraterrestrial life could be near at hand

NASA's Curiosity rover, seen here in a self-portrait from spring 2014, has found conclusive evidence of methane in the atmosphere of Mars. The gas is a potential sign of alien life, though it could also be produced through abiotic mechanisms. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

Is there life on Mars? The answer may be blowing in the wind. NASAs Curiosity rover has detected fluctuating traces of methane a possible sign of life in the thin, cold air of the Martian atmosphere, researchers announced today at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union. Across Mars and within Gale Crater, where Curiosity is slowly climbing a spire of sedimentary rock called Mount Sharp, the methane exists at a background concentration of slightly less than one part per billion by volume in the atmosphere (ppb). However, for reasons unknown, four times across a period of two months the rover measured much higher methane abundances, at about ten times the background level. Further in-situ studies of the methane emissions could help pin down whether Mars has life, now or in its deep past, though it is unclear when or if those studies will ever take place. The findings are published in the journal Science. Most of the methane on Earth is produced by biology, and the hope has been that methane on Mars could be reduced to life on Mars, says lead author Chris Webster, a senior research scientist at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. But we cannot yet distinguish whether the high methane levels were seeing are being produced geochemically or biologically. Webster and his team believe the unexpected bursts of methane are produced relatively nearby, somewhere north of the rover, before being carried to Curiosity on prevailing winds. The findings are a dramatic reversal from Curiositys earlier results released one year ago, in which it used data gathered over a third of a Martian year to all but rule out significant quantities of methane in the Martian air. That null result, it is now clear, was due to the actual background level of Martian methane lying just below the threshold of detectability for the standard operations of Curiositys instruments. To sniff out the methane, the Curiosity team had to look longer and harder. For these new results, they collected data over the course of a full Martian year, and gathered enriched samples of Martian air that were stripped of carbon dioxide to amplify fainter traces of methane. The one-part-per-billion methane background they eventually found, Webster says, translates to about 200 metric tons of the gas flowing through the Martian atmosphere each year. The Earth, by comparison, annually has about half a billion metric tons of methane cycling through its air. Most of Earths methane comes from anaerobic bacteria living in low-oxygen environments, such as stagnant water and the guts of animals, though abiotic processes such as hot water flowing through mineral-rich rock can also produce the gas. Marss minuscule methane background is broadly consistent with what should be produced by ultraviolet light striking the carbon-rich debris of meteorites, comets, and interplanetary dust that periodically fall to the Red Planet. But this mechanism cannot easily explain the methane spikes that Curiosity observed, as it calls for large, very recent meteoritic impacts or airbursts in the vicinity of Gale Crater that would leave clear signs which vigilant orbiting spacecraft should have spotted by now. Alternatively, the Curiosity team suggests the methane spikes may come from unseen, buried deposits of clathrates, lattices of ice that can trap gases such as methane in their crystalline structure. Another possibility is that the methane spikes arent small, transient events produced near Curiosity, but that they are instead whiffs of larger methane releases occurring much farther away on the planet. For more than a decade, various teams using noise-riddled observations from Earthbound telescopes or interplanetary orbiters have claimed to see signs of massive methane releases in the Martian atmosphere, at varying concentrations of between ten to nearly sixty ppb. In 2009, the leader of one of those teams, Michael Mumma, a senior scientist at NASAs Goddard Space flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., announced the detection of giant, globe-girdling plumes of methane periodically venting from localized regions on the Martian surface. Other researchers, notably Kevin Zahnle of NASAs Ames Research Center in Calif., cast doubt on the reality of the plumes. Zahnle says that the effects of Earths atmosphere could have contaminated Mummas telescopic data, and that the plumes purported transience required the unlikely existence of some potent planet-wide chemical catalyst to scrub the methane from the air. Curiositys early sniffs of seemingly methane-free Martian air were widely seen as a more definitive repudiation, since even with some unknown methane-scrubbing catalyst such huge plumes would still have left clearly detectable enhanced concentrations of the gas distributed throughout the planets atmosphere. Though the huge plumes he claimed in 2009 have now fallen out of favor, Mumma still suspects something like them, venting in large amounts far away from the rover, could be the source for Curiositys methane spikes. Arguments for a weaker, more local release, he notes, rely on assumptions about wind patterns in and around Gale Crater that are not yet fully backed by available data. What the Curiosity results really confirm is that we still do not understand the release and persistence of methane on Mars, Mumma says. In a nutshell, this is very exciting because it very clearly shows methane has a source on the planet. That source, however, could also be the rover itself, which has components known to have outgassed small amounts of methane in the past. The rover has a lot of methane in it, that is not disputed, says Zahnle, who is authoring a forthcoming commentary in Science on the findings. The real issue is what is the source of the methane in the samples: rover or Mars? The Curiosity team, Webster says, has gone to heroic lengths to test against possible confounding effects from the rover, repeatedly monitoring all its relevant components for signs of methane contamination. The team even carefully analyzed rock samples from the section of Curiositys traverse where it detected enhanced methane, just in case the rovers heavy wheels happened to crush any deposits of gas-rich material under its treads. Time after time, their results suggested the most plausible conclusion was that the methane spikes Curiosity measured were genuine signs of mysterious processes occurring elsewhere, outside of the rovers immediate vicinity. If those processes are biological, and Martian microbes are even now belching methane from subsurface refuges, Webster believes it is within our grasp to now find out. On Earth, bacteria are lazy, or rather, inefficient, he says. They like to use a lighter isotope of carbon, carbon-12. So the methane they produce is depleted in a heavier isotope, carbon-13, by up to fifteen percent. If Curiosity is lucky enough to observe another methane spike, Webster argues that relatively minor tweaks to the process of gathering enriched air samples could allow the rover to measure the ratio of carbon-12 to carbon-13 well enough to distinguish between a biotic and abiotic source. All thats needed, essentially, is a larger number of measurements and a longer enrichment time for Curiositys air samples. Such measurements, however, face competition as steep as the climb up Mount Sharp that the rover is now attempting. The last time Curiosity sniffed the air for methane, Webster says, was five months ago. Curiosity was meant to be a mission to study signs of habitability on ancient Mars, not signs of life on Mars in the present day, says Paul Mahaffy, a senior Curiosity team member at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center. An intensive search for more Martian methane could easily prevent Curiosity accomplishing those primary goals. Other, future missions, such as Europes ExoMars orbiter and rover launching later this decade, or NASAs next rover, a Curiosity clone slated for launch in 2020, could potentially take the next necessary steps in unraveling the mystery of Martian methane. Webster notes that instruments now exist which are a thousand times more sensitive than Curiositys methane-sniffing kit, instruments that could in theory discern the gass potentially biotic origins with ease. But those instruments are presently not planned for flight on any upcoming mission from NASA or any other space agency. Well continue to monitor for the methane, but unfortunately these experiments are power-hungry, Mahaffy says. They consume a lot of [Curiositys] resources, and there is always, always a lot of geology to do. At the same meeting at which the tantalizing methane results were announced, the Curiosity team also presented yet more evidence that, early in its life, Mars was warm and wet, far more Earthlike and probably capable of sustaining life. Alas, barring a major shift in the pace and emphasis of our present explorations, the question of whether the planet sustains life now may remain unanswered for many years to come.

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NASA Rover Finds Mysterious Methane Emissions on Mars

In Mississippi, NASA built $349 million laboratory tower it didnt need

Sealing towers fate

In the summer of 2010, Congress saved the tower in Mississippi for good.

It happened without anybody mentioning the projects name aloud.

This is a big day for America, said then-Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Tex.), as it was about to happen. Hutchison was speaking in July 2010 at a meeting of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee.

Were doing the right thing for America. For our economy. For our creativity, she said. For our science. And for our security.

Hutchison was announcing a new compromise with the White House, which would finally settle the fight over Constellation. Constellation was dead. Instead, the senators were telling NASA to build something that they had just made up: a Space Launch System (jokers at NASA call it the Senate Launch System).

The new plan for NASA was, as usual, long on how and short on why.

The senators were clear about what they wanted NASA to do: keep some Constellation-era projects going, with all their salaries and spending, and try to integrate them into a new system.

But what was the goal of all that? The moon was off the table. Instead, NASA is now focused on a less impressive rock: an asteroid. Sometime in the 2020s, NASA wants to capture one about the size of a house, and then have astronauts zoom up and examine it. This was not a mission chosen to captivate the worlds imagination. It was a mission chosen to use the leftovers that Congress had told NASA to reheat. (Mars still remains a distant goal: At the earliest, NASA might get there in the 2030s.)

At first, the Senates new plan looked bad for the tower in Mississippi. At best, it now would be a project built on spec: erected in the hope that someday NASA might return to the idea of a giant rocket engine that fired in a vacuum.

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In Mississippi, NASA built $349 million laboratory tower it didnt need

How NASA spent $349 million on a useless tower

STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images NASA logo on a protective box for a camera near the space shuttle Endeavour.

In June, NASA finished work on a huge construction project here in Mississippi: a $349million laboratory tower, designed to test a new rocket engine in a chamber that mimicked the vacuum of space.

Then NASA did something odd.

As soon as the work was done, it shut the tower down. The project was officially mothballed closed up and left empty without ever being used.

You lock the door, so nobody gets in and hurts themselves, said Daniel Dumbacher, a former NASA official who oversaw the project.

The reason for the shutdown: The new tower called the A-3 test stand was useless. Just as expected. The rocket program it was designed for had been canceled in 2010.

But, at first, cautious NASA bureaucrats didnt want to stop the construction on their own authority. And then Congress at the urging of a senator from Mississippi swooped in and ordered the agency to finish the tower, no matter what.

The result was that NASA spent four more years building something it didnt need. Now, the agency will spend about $700,000 a year to maintain it in disuse.

The empty tower in Mississippi is evidence of a breakdown at NASA, which used to be a glorious symbol of what an American bureaucracy could achieve. In the space race days of the 1960s, the agency was given a clear, galvanizing mission: Reach the moon within the decade. In less than seven, NASA got it done.

Now, NASA has become a symbol of something else: what happens to a big bureaucracy after its sense of mission starts to fade.

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How NASA spent $349 million on a useless tower

NASA satellites spy holiday lights from space

WASHINGTON, Dec. 17 (UPI) -- NASA is doing its best to get in the holiday spirit. On Wednesday, the space agency released a number of images showing what holiday lights look like from 518 miles above Earth's surface.

Scientists at NASA also used data collected by the agency's Suomi NPP satellite and its Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite to determine when and where lights shine brightest over the holidays. They found major cities shine up to 50 percent brighter over Christmas and New Years.

The new data isn't part of some intergalactic holiday light competition, its being collected and analyzed as a way to understand urban energy use patterns and ultimately improve conservation and allocation of resources.

"In the United States, the lights started getting brighter on the day after Thanksgiving and continued through New Years Day," NASA officials wrote in a recent news release. "The science team found that light intensity increased by 30 to 50 percent in the suburbs and outskirts of major cities."

In the composite images released by NASA, the color green is used to denote a uptick in energy use and light output during the holidays, while yellow suggests no change and red represents a decrease.

"It's a near ubiquitous signal," explained lead researcher Miguel Romn. "Despite being ethnically and religiously diverse, we found that the U.S. experiences a holiday increase across most urban communities. These lighting patterns are tracking a national, shared tradition."

2014 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

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NASA satellites spy holiday lights from space