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Domain > keplermission.com
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More information on this domain is in
AlienVault OTX
Is this malicious?
Yes
No
DNS Resolutions
Date
IP Address
2020-04-16
192.81.249.45
(
ClassC
)
2025-11-02
38.58.178.85
(
ClassC
)
Port 80
HTTP/1.1 301 Moved PermanentlyConnection: Keep-AliveKeep-Alive: timeout5, max100content-type: text/htmlcontent-length: 795date: Sun, 02 Nov 2025 15:16:47 GMTserver: LiteSpeedlocation: https://keplermission.com/vary: User-Agent !DOCTYPE html>html styleheight:100%>head>meta nameviewport contentwidthdevice-width, initial-scale1, shrink-to-fitno />title> 301 Moved Permanently/title>style>@media (prefers-color-scheme:dark){body{background-color:#000!important}}/style>/head>body stylecolor: #444; margin:0;font: normal 14px/20px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; height:100%; background-color: #fff;>div styleheight:auto; min-height:100%; > div styletext-align: center; width:800px; margin-left: -400px; position:absolute; top: 30%; left:50%;> h1 stylemargin:0; font-size:150px; line-height:150px; font-weight:bold;>301/h1>h2 stylemargin-top:20px;font-size: 30px;>Moved Permanently/h2>p>The document has been permanently moved./p>/div>/div>/body>/html>
Port 443
HTTP/1.1 200 OKConnection: Keep-AliveKeep-Alive: timeout5, max100content-type: text/htmllast-modified: Mon, 05 Feb 2024 18:36:28 GMTetag: 1f3d-65c12aac-d2132d0f44bfb9c9;;;accept-ranges: bytescontent-length: 7997date: Sun, 02 Nov 2025 15:16:47 GMTserver: LiteSpeedvary: User-Agent HTML>HEAD>TITLE>www.keplermission.com/TITLE>/HEAD>body BGCOLOR#000000 TEXT#FFFFFF ALINK#6633FF VLINK#FFFF00 LINK#FFFF00>center>font size2 faceArial color#FFFFFF>kepler mission . com/font>br>img srcgfx/keplerlogo.gif>br>font size6 faceArial color#6633FF>B>Kepler Mission/B>/font>br>font size3 faceArial color#33CC33>b>A first space mission to find Earth-size planets./b>br>This is a u>personal/u> webpage of NASAs KeplerMission, created by Margus Hõim.br>b>The Kepler Spacecraft was successfully launched on font color#6633FF size4>March 7, 2009 font color#33CC33>!/b>/font>br>br>font size2 faceverdana colorFFFFFF> • a hrefhttp://keplermission.com/index.html>Main page/a> • a hrefhttp://keplermission.com/char.html>Characteristics/a> • a hrefhttp://keplermission.com/detection.html>Planet Detection/a> • a hrefhttp://keplermission.com/ill.html>Illustrations/a> • /font> br>hr width550 color#6633FF>table aligncenter cellspacing1>td aligncenter width700>br>div styletext-align: justify>P>font size2 faceverdana color#33CC33>B>BREAKING NEWS/B>/font>font size2 faceverdana colorFFFFFF>:br>br>17.april.2014br>b>First Earth-Size Planet Discovered That May Support Life/b>! NASA scientists have just found an Earth-size planet outside of our solar system in the habitable region of its host star (red dwarf Kepler 186) that may possibly contain liquid water and the suitable environment for life...br>a hrefhttp://www.keplermission.com/kepler186f.html>... READ MORE about Kepler 186f/a>br>br>26.august.2010br>b>Kepler space telescope detects possible earth-sized planet outside our solar system!/b>NASAs scientists have announced that they might have spotted a planet just about 1.5 times the diameter of Earth around a sun-like star 2000 light-years away./font>br>br>More info and website updates coming soon!/font>/font>P>font size2 faceverdana color#33CC33>B>First Words/B>/font>font size2 faceverdana colorFFFFFF>:br>Scheduled for launch on the 5th of march 2009, the Kepler Mission will use a unique spaceborne photometer specifically designed to search for Earth-sized planets around stars beyond our solar system. The KeplerMission will, for the first time, enable humans to search our galaxy for Earth-size or even smaller planets, said principal investigator William Borucki of the Planetary Systems Branch of the Space Science Division. With this cutting-edge capability, Kepler may help us answer one of the most enduring questions humans have asked throughout history: are there others like us in the universe?/font>br>br>font size2 faceverdana color#33CC33>B>The Importance of Planet Detection/B>/font>font size2 faceverdana colorFFFFFF>:br>The Kepler Mission is specifically designed to survey the extended solar neighborhood to detect and characterize hundreds of terrestrial and larger IMG SRCgfx/planet.jpg alignleft altearth-like planet>planets in or near the habitable zone and provide fundamental progress and large leaps in our understanding of planetary systems. The results will yield a broad under-standing of planetary formation, the frequency of formation, the structure of individual planetary systems and the generic characteristics of stars with terrestrial planets./font>br>br>font size2 faceverdana color#33CC33>B>Science Objectives/B>/font>font size2 faceverdana colorFFFFFF>:br>The scientific goal of the Kepler Mission is to explore the structure and diversity of planetary systems. This is achieved by surveying a large sampleof dwarf (main-sequence) stars to:br>B>1./B> Determine the frequency of terrestrial and largerplanets in or near the habitable zone of a widevariety of spectral types of starsbr>B>2./B> Determine the distributions of planet sizes andtheir orbital semi-major axesbr>B>3./B> Estimate the frequency and orbital distributionof planets in multiple-stellar systemsbr>B>4./B> Determine the distributions of semi-major axis,albedo, size, mass, and density of short-periodgiant planetsbr>B>5./B> Identify additional members of each photomet-ricallydiscovered planetary system using com-plementarytechniquesbr>B>6./B> Determine the properties of those stars that har-borplanetary systems.br>The Kepler Mission supports the objectives of theOrigins theme and directly contributes to the de-signof the Terrestrial Planet Finder as recom-mendedin the NRC 2001 decadal survey./font>br>br>font size2 faceverdana color#33CC33>B>Overview of the Mission/B>/font>font size2 faceverdana colorFFFFFF>:br>Kepler measures repetitive stellar brightness changes on the order of 100 parts per million last-ing for 2 to 16 hours caused by transiting terrestrialplanets. The planets orbit is calculated from the period of the transits. The size of the planet is calculated from the transit depth. The proposed differential photometer continuously and simultaneously monitors the brightness of 100,000 dwarf stars for four years; long enough to see four transitsof a terrestrial planet in the habitable zone of a solar-like star. To obtain the required precision, the photometer must be spaceborne; this also eliminatesthe day-night and seasonal cycle interruptions of ground-based observing./font>br>br>font size2 faceverdana color#33CC33>B>Expected Results/B>/font>font size2 faceverdana colorFFFFFF>:br>Kepler Mission expects to perform a census of planets with periods from days to a few years and to detect:br>B>Transits of terrestrial planets near 1 AU/B> (Astronomical Unit - a distance from earth to sun)br>• About 50 planets if most have radii about equal to the Earth (R ~ 1.0 R ?)br>• About 185 planets if most have R ~ 1.3 R ?br>• About 640 planets if most have R ~ 2.2 R ?br>br>B>Transits of thousands of terrestrial planets/B>br>• If most have orbits much less than 1 AUbr>br>B>Modulation of the reflected light of giant inner planets /B>br>• About 870 planets with periods ?1 weekbr>br>B>Transits of giant planets/B>br>• About 135 inner-orbit planets with albedos for about 100 of these giantsbr>• Densities for 35 inner-orbit planetsbr>• About 30 outer-orbit planets.br>br>The results likely consist of a mix of all of the above. From these results, NASA can explore IMG SRCgfx/kepler_solsys.jpg alignright altPhotometer / Spacecraft> the structure and diversity of planetary systems. The results are also still significant even if no planets are found, since the mission is designed to detect so many terrestrial planets.br>The mission is sensitive to a large number of planets even smaller than Earth in short period orbits as a result of the larger number of observed transits.br>br>br>br>br>br>br>br>br>br>br>hr width550 color#6633FF aligncenter>center>?include(menu.html)?> br>br> • font size1 faceverdana colorFFFFFF>a hrefdisclaimer.html>Disclaimer/a> •/font> /P>/table>br>br>/b>br>br>br>br>script typetext/javascript> var _gaq _gaq || ; _gaq.push(_setAccount, UA-18037035-1); _gaq.push(_trackPageview); (function() { var ga document.createElement(script); ga.type text/javascript; ga.async true; ga.src (https: document.location.protocol ? https://ssl : http://www) + .google-analytics.com/ga.js; var s document.getElementsByTagName(script)0; s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga, s); })();/script>br>?$current_date (date (F j, Y));echo($current_date);?>br>br>/BODY>/HTML>
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