Nasa has declared its elite planet-hunting spacecraft dead.
Officials announced the Kepler Space Telescope’s demise on Tuesday.
Already well past its expected lifetime, the nine-year-old Kepler had been running low on fuel for months.
Its ability to point at specific regions in the cosmos worsened dramatically at the beginning of October, but flight controllers still managed to retrieve its latest observations.
LIVE NOW: Our experts discuss the status of our @NASAKepler Space Telescope that has searched for planets beyond our solar system since 2009 and was last reported to be in no-fuel sleep mode. Listen in at https://t.co/w5ymccPauI and ask questions using #askNASA. pic.twitter.com/DHFE1g3wpU
— NASA (@NASA) October 30, 2018
The telescope has now gone silent.
Kepler discovered more than 2,600 planets outside our solar system.
It showed us rocky worlds the size of Earth that, like Earth, might harbour life.
By staring down stars, Kepler also unveiled incredible super Earths: planets bigger than Earth but smaller than Neptune.
The end came just a few months shy of the 10th anniversary of Kepler’s 2009 launch.