
Sold by: Space Telescope Science Institute
Open data
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Deployed on AWS
The Kepler mission observed the brightness of more than 180,000 stars near the Cygnus constellation at a 30 minute cadence for 4 years in order to find transiting exoplanets, study variable stars, and find eclipsing binaries.
Overview
The Kepler mission observed the brightness of more than 180,000 stars near the Cygnus constellation at a 30 minute cadence for 4 years in order to find transiting exoplanets, study variable stars, and find eclipsing binaries.
Features and programs
Open Data Sponsorship Program
This dataset is part of the Open Data Sponsorship Program, an AWS program that covers the cost of storage for publicly available high-value cloud-optimized datasets.
Pricing
This is a publicly available data set. No subscription is required.
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Legal
Content disclaimer
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Delivery details
AWS Data Exchange (ADX)
AWS Data Exchange is a service that helps AWS easily share and manage data entitlements from other organizations at scale.
Open data resources
Available with or without an AWS account.
- How to use
- To access these resources, reference the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) using the AWS Command Line Interface (CLI). Learn more
- Description
- Kepler Mission data files
- Resource type
- S3 bucket
- Amazon Resource Name (ARN)
- arn:aws:s3:::stpubdata/kepler
- AWS region
- us-east-1
- AWS CLI access (No AWS account required)
- aws s3 ls --no-sign-request s3://stpubdata/kepler/
Resources
Vendor resources
Support
Contact
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How to cite
Kepler Mission Data was accessed on DATE from https://registry.opendata.aws/kepler .
License
Public domain. Attribution required for refereed scientific papers.
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The K2 mission observed 100 square degrees for 80 days each across 20 different pointings along the ecliptic, collecting high-precision photometry for a selection of targets within each field. The mission began when the original Kepler mission ended due to loss of the second reaction wheel in 2013.