NASA Has Stopped Trying To Fix The Kepler Space Telescope
Kepler Space Telescope Kepler is designed to look for Earth-like planets orbiting Sun-like stars in a temperate "Goldilocks zone," where temperatures are right for liquid water. It stares at a patch of around 156,000 stars in the constellations Cygnus and Lyra and notes teeny blips in their brightness, which could indicate planets passing in front of the stars' faces. NASA But they won't put the hobbling two-wheeled spacecraft out to pasture yet. Well, NASA's crippled Kepler space telescope, launched in 2009, is officially beyond repair. Two of the four wheels used to align the telescope have failed over the past year, and NASA engineers haven't been able to get either of them working again. NASA announced today that attempts to fully restore the spacecraft have ceased. This may not spell the total end of Kepler's mission, though. NASA will still try to figure out a way to use the spacecraft...