Draper Congratulates Sara Seager, Exoplanet Expert, for MacArthur Fellowship
Cambridge, MA (PRWEB) September 27, 2013 -- Draper Laboratory congratulates Sara Seager, an MIT professor who collaborated with the Lab on the development of a tiny spacecraft that could hunt for exoplanets, for her inclusion with the 2013 class of MacArthur Fellows.
Draper collaborated with Seager, an astrophysicist and planetary scientist, on the development of ExoPlanetSat, a cubesat just 10 centimeters tall, 10cm wide and 30cm long, that could look for planets that orbit stars other than the sun. ExoPlanetSat could enable NASA to dedicate relatively inexpensive assets to stare at a single star for long periods of time to look for transits – decreases in brightness that suggest a previously unmapped Earth-like planet passed between the viewer and the star.
Draper contributed expertise in optics, guidance, navigation and control technology to develop an arc-second (1/3600th of a degree) class pointing and stabilization system for ExoPlanetSat. The Lab also contributed funding to Seager’s work with MIT students to design the spacecraft’s platform, or bus.
In a Sept. 24 news release, the MacArthur Foundation credits Seager with “quickly advancing a subfield initially viewed with skepticism by the scientific community,” and hailed ExoPlanetSat for its potential to “open up a new avenue for wide-ranging space exploration.”
Draper Laboratory
Draper Laboratory, which celebrates 80 years of service to the nation in 2013, is a not-for-profit, engineering research and development organization dedicated to solving critical national problems in national security, space systems, biomedical systems, and energy. Core capabilities include guidance, navigation and control; miniature low power systems; highly reliable complex systems; information and decision systems; autonomous systems; biomedical and chemical systems; and secure networks and communications.
Jeremy Singer, Draper Laboratory, http://www.draper.com, 617.258-2464, [email protected]
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