Hype or Excitement?

Which is It?

Commenters Paul Sutherland and Daniel Fischer and I had a lively discussion in the comments in my last entry about the Kepler mission results, and thanks to them I had a little food for thought for this entry.  The issue is “hype” and when it gets applied to science announcements.  The science community is understandably cautious when announcing new results. Anybody who was around during the infamous “cold fusion” announcement days will understand why — those were results that WERE hyped by a self-serving research institution that didn’t look well enough at the results before applying the hype.  It was a fiasco.

Yesterday’s announcement about the Kepler mission observing atmospheric characteristics of a distant planet was an exciting one.  It wasn’t the announcement of a planetary discovery — it went well beyond that to show us that the instrument, even when doing calibration studies, is capable of returning good, useful data. This is important because Kepler is supposedly the NASA mission that will help scientists find Earth-like planets.

One of my commenters applied the word “hype” to the announcement, and I don’t think that term really applies.  Hype would apply if the press conference participants were making claims that weren’t backed up by solid science. I didn’t see any evidence of that, nor do I think they were saying things that weren’t true. They were excited by the many thousands of good, clean light curves that Kepler returned — and, I think, excited as any scientist would be, at the solid potential for discovery as Kepler goes about its mission. The data coming from Kepler — as well as any other mission doing similar work — will be a treasure trove for future scientists around the world.

No legitimate scientist deserves the term “hype” to be applied to diligently performed science — I don’t care if they’re from NASA or Europe or Japan or Russia or India or wherever good astronomy and space science are being done.  Certainly NASA comes in for its share of criticism of “over-promoting” stories, but as I pointed out to my commenters, I’ve also seen it done by institutions outside of NASA.  No one country’s science community has a monopoly on breathless prose.

I get a number of press releases each week from around the world, and there have been occasional stories come out with breathless reportage that doesn’t always do justice to the story being promoted.  It’s not a problem unique to any one country or institution — and actually, I think that a certain amount of breathlessness is understandable in the media environment we all face.  Hell, it’s human to be excited about what we learn, isn’t it?  Or, should we have all our scientists get up on podiums with long faces, white lab coats, skinny ties, and talk to us in Greek symbols?  I don’t think so…

My main point yesterday is that the mainstream media just doesn’t report on science as it should — and so to get attention, I suspect that public information officers sometimes get a little excited in their writing.  I think that I’d rather see a little excitement in press releases and stories than the alternative — dry, cold facts without a shred of the human interest that makes science the exciting endeavor that it is.  Note that I’m not excusing the kind of “hype” that brought us the cold fusion disaster — not at all.  There’s a happy medium, but given a choice, I’d rather read excitement in someone’s prose.  What do you think?

Note: both correspondents brought up another issue about the lack of mentions of prior discoveries about exoplanets by non-NASA missions. This is a fair discussion point — however, my reading of the situation is that (as I mentioned in my replies to them) the purpose of a press conference IS to talk about what the given spacecraft/telescope/instrument has observed. Given the time constraints of press conferences, that may be all that the scientists have time to talk about.

However, as I (and Daniel and Paul) know, those references to prior work ARE mentioned properly in the professional papers that are published from the data.  I’m not sure how one solves the problem of mentioning all related work in a press conference — and I invite discussion on that point.  I’ll share one anecdote from a press conference I attended once at a meeting.  One scientist was going to talk about some of his team’s work on a particular observatory’s instrument and wanted to mention another team’s work as a reference point for the observations they had done. The first scientist talked to the second scientist about it and was accused of trying to steal the second team’s thunder.  That wasn’t really what he wanted to do, but in fairness to the second team, he refrained from mentioning their work — and was then accused of ignoring other observations!  So, there may be political considerations as well as time constraints in these press conferences. We of the press (and outside the science teams) don’t always know the story behind the story being told and how it was put together. But, at least we have the papers to read to find out the fullness of any given research effort and the influences upon it.

Kepler Detects the Atmosphere of a Distant World

Media Misses the Story

As my bud Phil Plait would say, “Holy Exoplanet!” The Kepler mission team today announced that their orbiting planet hunter has detected the atmosphere of a known gas giant planet that lies about a thousand light-years from us in the direction of the constellation Cygnus, the Swan.

This is a pretty big story and it should have been mentioned on the evening news, or at least as a headline on places like CNN. But, it wasn’t. What’s it take to get the press excited these days? A scan of CNN headlines shows me that they care about Obama’s grades six months into his presidency (which, by the way, has been a “top” story for two days now), lawmakers whinging about military uniforms, a story about whether anybody is flipping out over Twitter being down for a while earlier today, and a “lifestyle” story about the booming sales at dollar stores. Apparently news of an atmosphere on another planet — a very tough, rare and important discovery, just doesn’t make the cut. Actually, very little science has been making the news, despite the fact that there have been some hot stories and gorgeous images released lately. It’s as if the media don’t give a damn about science if it doesn’t bleed, lead, or bleat about political figures. No wonder so many citizens of the United States are verging science illiteracy — our media don’t bother to report science discoveries very much or very well. Which is sad.

Real science showing evidence for a real atmosphere of a planet a thousand light-years away from us. Courtesy NASA/Kepler mission. Click to embiggen.
Real science showing evidence for a real atmosphere of a planet a thousand light-years away from us. Courtesy NASA/Kepler mission. Click to embiggen.

Well, I’ll tell you about this story. It’s all about light curves — which may have scared off the media. It’s not a pretty picture of the kind they like to put up on the front page.  It’s data and it takes a little explaining — which isn’t hard — but try telling a hardened editor that this is more exciting than yet another story about Michael Jackson’s kids…

So, what’s a light curve? Sometimes stars (or other objects) vary in their brightness. If you chart that variation, you get a curve. It swoops up when the object is bright and then down when the object is dim. Variable stars get brighter and dimmer all the time. So do asteroids — as they tumble through space, they reflect different amounts of sunlight, producing a light curve.

Well, some stars show a changing light curve that has nothing to do with being a variable star. Something is causing those stars to dim just a tiny bit on a regular periodic schedule. What could that be? How about a planet?  Planets circle their stars on regular schedules, and as they pass between us and their stars, the amount of light we (or actually our instruments) see from each of those stars gets a little dimmer. If you chart the dimming and brightening over time, you can get a good idea of how long a planet takes to go around its star.

Well, this is exactly what Kepler is doing — measuring light curves of thousands of stars in a field in the constellation Cygnus. Today, astronomers released the news that one of those light curves of a star about a thousand light-years away showed evidence of a planetary atmosphere. That is spectacular news because 1) it hasn’t been done like this before and 2) it’s based on ten days of test data, where the instruments onboard the spacecraft looked at the amount of light coming from stars in its field of view.

The data were collected after Kepler was launched but before the actual science ops began. Make no mistake about it — finding a planetary atmosphere a thousand light-years away in data taken to test an instrument tells me that this spacecraft is going to be uncovering a bunch of new worlds and telling us MUCH more about the state of newly discovered planets in our galaxy. It’s like pointing your telescope to the sky for the first time and spotting a comet right out of the blue.

The observations are of the planet HAT-P-7, a world astronomers already knew existed from a prior discovery. The planet follows a whoppingly fast 2.2-day orbit around its star and lies about 26 times closer to its star than Earth lies from the Sun. Kepler detected this world as it transited (passed in front of) the star. The repeated transits cause tiny dips in the amount of light that the spacecraft sees coming from the star.

HAT-P-7 is a “hot Jupiter.” It’s so close to its parent star that the heat of its glow is about the same as the red heating element on a stove. The new measurements are so precise they also show a smooth rise and fall of the light between transits caused by the changing phases of the planet, similar to those of our moon. This is a combination of both the light emitted from the planet and the light reflected off the planet. That is, the light curve of the star was changed not just by the transit of the planet, but by the changing phases of the planet.

The rise and fall of light is also punctuated by a small drop in light, called an occultation, exactly halfway between each transit. An occultation happens when a planet passes behind a star. The depth of the occultation and the shape and amplitude of the light curve show that the planet has an atmosphere with a day-side temperature of about 4,310 degrees Fahrenheit. Little of this heat is carried to the cool night side. The occultation time compared to the main transit time shows the planet has a circular orbit. The discovery of light from this planet confirms the predictions by researchers and theoretical models that the emission would be detectable by Kepler.

This new discovery at HAT-P-7 also shows us that Kepler has the precision to find Earth-size planets — which I can guarantee you is going to be pretty exciting when it happens. Of course, it will show up in a light curve and not a pretty picture — but that data will be beautiful in its own right!

What I find interesting to speculate about is that if Kepler were 1,000 light-years away from US and looked back at Earth, it would see similar dips and changes in the  light curve of the Sun as Earth orbits it. That distant Kepler, operated by aliens who want to know if the Sun has any planets with life, would be excited to know that our planet has an atmosphere. And, they’d wonder whether any life was being supported by that atmosphere.  (And, hopefully, their media would be more on the ball about reporting such a discovery.)

If I were you, I’d keep an eye on the Kepler mission via their web site — there’s bound to be more big news coming from this wonderful spacecraft. Heck, it might show us an Earth-like planet soon. But, don’t bet on the media covering that unless there’s something sexy, bloody, or politically banal discovered on the surface of the planet. If it doesn’t bleed, it apparently doesn’t lead.

Update, Monday August 10: I had to laugh last night when I clicked on CNN.com and saw that they were finally headlining this story — late on a Sunday night in the last part of the weekend news cycle.  There’s an interesting twist this time: they posted the story about the NASA mission with an image from the ESA COROT mission about an entirely different  planetary atmosphere discovery made by the COROT satellite. The image CNN used to illustrate their Kepler story is credited to NASA and apparently came from NASA, even though it was first used on the ESA site to illustrate the COROT findings (in  first appeared last year on the it’s clearly stated on the ESA web page that the credit is ESA-C. Carreau.  CNN just put up there what they were given — albeit a few days after the actual news was released.