(CNN)
--
Calling
it a
mission
that
may
fundamentally
change
humanity's
view
of
itself,
NASA
on
Friday
prepared
to
launch
a
telescope
that
will
search
our
corner
of
the
Milky
Way
galaxy
for
Earth-like
planets.
This image shows part of the Milky Way region of the sky where the Kepler spacecraft will be pointing.
The
Kepler
spacecraft
is
scheduled
to
blast
into
space
on
top
of a
Delta
II
rocket
from
Cape
Canaveral
Air
Force
Station
in
Florida
just
before
11
p.m.
ET.
"This
is a
historical
mission.
It's
not
just
a
science
mission,"
NASA
Associate
Administrator
Ed
Weiler
said
during
a
pre-launch
news
conference.
"It
really
attacks
some
very
basic
human
questions
that
have
been
part
of
our
genetic
code
since
that
first
man
or
woman
looked
up
in
the
sky
and
asked
the
question:
Are
we
alone?"
Kepler
contains
a
special
telescope
that
will
stare
at
100,000
stars
in
the
Cygnus-Lyra
region
of
the
Milky
Way
for
more
than
three
years
as
it
trails
Earth's
orbit
around
the
Sun.
The
spacecraft
will
look
for
tiny
dips
in a
star's
brightness,
which
can
mean
an
orbiting
planet
is
passing
in
front
of
it
--
an
event
called
a
transit.
Watch
how
astronomers
will
try
to
find
'Earths'
»
The
instrument
is
so
precise
that
it
can
register
changes
in
brightness
of
20
parts
per
million
in
stars
that
are
thousands
of
light
years
away.
"Being
able
to
make
that
kind
of a
sensitive
measurement
over
a
very
large
number
of
stars
was
extremely
challenging,"
Kepler
project
manager
James
Fanson
said.
"So
we're
very
proud
of
the
vehicle
we
have
built.
This
is a
crowning
achievement
for
NASA
and
a
monumental
step
in
our
search
for
other
worlds
around
other
stars."
Are
we
alone?
The
$600
million
mission
is
named
after
Johannes
Kepler,
a
17th-century
German
astronomer
who
was
the
first
to
correctly
explain
planetary
motion.
His
discoveries
combined
with
modern
technology
may
soon
help
to
answer
whether
we
are
alone
in
the
universe
or
whether
Earth-like
worlds
inhabited
by
some
type
of
life
are
common.
"We
won't
find
E.T.,
but
we
might
find
E.T.'s
home,"
said
William
Borucki,
science
principal
investigator
for
the
Kepler
mission.
About
330
"exoplanets"
--
those
circling
sun-like
stars
outside
the
solar
system
--
have
been
discovered
since
the
first
was
confirmed
in
1995.
Most
are
gas
giants
like
Jupiter,
but
some
have
been
classified
as
"super
earths,"
or
worlds
several
times
the
mass
of
our
planet,
said
Alan
Boss,
an
astronomer
with
the
Carnegie
Institution
who
serves
on
the
Kepler
Science
Council.
They
are
too
hot
to
support
life,
he
added,
calling
them
"steam
worlds."
Europe's
COROT
space
telescope
caused
a
stir
last
month
when
it
spotted
the
smallest
terrestrial
exoplanet
ever
found.
With
a
diameter
less
than
twice
that
of
Earth,
the
planet
orbits
very
close
to
its
star
and
has
temperatures
up
to
1,500°
Celsius
(more
than
2,700°
Fahrenheit),
according
to
the
European
Space
Agency.
It
may
be
rocky
and
covered
in
lava.
Scientists
have
marveled
how
strange
some
of
the
alien
worlds
are.
"The
density
of
these
planets
has
been
astounding,"
Borucki
said.
"We're
finding
planets
that
float
like
a
piece
of
foam
on
water,
[with]
very,
very
low
densities.
We're
finding
some
planets
where
the
densities
are
heavier
than
that
of
lead."
The
Kepler
telescope,
however,
is
seeking
something
much
more
familiar:
Earth-like
planets
with
rocky
surfaces,
orbiting
in
their
stars'
habitable,
or
"Goldilocks,"
zones
--
not
too
hot
or
too
cold,
but
just
right
for
liquid
water
to
exist.
Watch
a
NASA
scientist
explain
where
life
could
exist
»
Quest
for
a
'pale
blue
dot'
Once
Kepler
spots
a
planet,
scientists
will
be
able
to
calculate
its
size,
mass,
orbital
period,
distance
from
star
and
surface
temperature,
Boss
said.
He
called
the
mission
a
"step
one"
that
will
tell
astronomers
how
hard
it
is
to
find
nearby
habitable
worlds.
"Once
we
know
how
many
there
really
are
...
then
NASA
will
be
able
to
build
space
telescopes
that
can
actually
go
out
and
take
a
picture
of
that
nearby
'Earth'
and
measure
the
elements
and
compounds
in
its
atmosphere
of
the
planet
and
give
us
some
hint
as
to
whether
or
not
it's
got
life,"
Boss
said.
Boss
believes
that
there
may
be
100
billion
Earth-like
planets
in
the
Milky
Way,
or
one
for
every
sun-type
star
in
the
galaxy.
He
said
scientists
should
know
by
2013
--
the
end
of
Kepler's
mission
--
whether
life
in
the
universe
could
be
widespread.
The
20-year
goal
is
to
someday
take
a
picture
of a
pale
blue
dot
orbiting
a
nearby
star,
said
Debra
Fischer,
an
astronomy
professor
at
San
Francisco
State
University,
during
a
NASA
news
conference.
Boss
called
it a
potentially
unprecedented
time
of
discovery
for
scientists.
"Sometimes,
people
call
this
the
golden
age
of
astronomy.
I
think
it's
more
like
the
platinum
age
of
astronomy.
It's
beyond
gold,"
Boss
said.