Meet at the Museum "Great Seal", in the Boeing Milestones of Flight Hall on the first floor.

About the Ask an Expert lecture series: Every Wednesday at noon in the National Mall Building, a Museum staff member talks to the public about the history, collection, or personalities related to a specific artifact or exhibition in the Museum.

Kepler is an orbiting space telescope launched in 2009. It searches distant stars for Earth-like planets within a solar system's "habitable zone," an area around a star that maintains a temperature range moderate enough to allow liquid water to exist on a planet's surface. 

In 2013 two of Kepler’s four reaction wheels, which pointed the spacecraft, failed. Efforts to fix them were unsuccessful, and data collection ceased. In 2014 Kepler began a new mission. Using pressure from sunlight, mission scientists can control the spacecraft's position again, and its hunt for planets has resumed.

This artist concept is of Kepler-452b, the most similar expoplanet to Earth found to date. It orbits in the habitable zone of star similar to our Sun. Kepler-452b is about 60 percent larger than Earth and orbits its star every 385 days. The star has nearly the same temperature and mass as our Sun.

How to attend

National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC

6th St. and Independence Ave SW. Washington, DC 20560