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click for more images ![]() Two Architectures Chosen for Terrestrial Planet Finder - Artists concepts of TPF-I (top) and TPF NASA/JPL Related Resources to Two Architectures Chosen for Terrestrial Planet FinderFull Size Image - Terrestrial Planet Finder MontageFull Size Image - Terrestrial Planet Finder TPF-IFull Size Image - Terrestrial Planet Finder TPF-II Two Architectures Chosen for Terrestrial Planet FinderFrom NASA May 2 2005 Included in the nation's vision for space in 2004 and beyond is a plan for NASA to "conduct advanced telescope searches for Earth-like planets and habitable environments around other stars." To meet this challenge, NASA has chosen to fly two separate missions with distinct and complementary architectures to achieve the goal of the Terrestrial Planet Finder. The purpose will be to take family portraits of stars and their orbiting planets, and to study those planets to see which, if any, might be habitable, or might even have life. Both missions would launch within the next 10 to 15 years.
The two missions are:
Terrestrial Planet Finder is managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. It is part of NASA's Origins program, a series of missions and studies designed to answer the questions: Where did we come from? Are we alone?
Full Size Terrestrial Planet Finder ImagesImage Credits: NASA/JPLRelated Resources to Two Architectures Chosen for Terrestrial Planet FinderFull Size Image - Terrestrial Planet Finder MontageFull Size Image - Terrestrial Planet Finder TPF-IFull Size Image - Terrestrial Planet Finder TPF-II |
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