TESS Coverage Animations
- Visualizations by:
- Brian Monroe
- Produced by:
- Scott Wiessinger
- View full credits
Movies
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Final_v01.mov (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Final_v01-HD_1080p.mov (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Final_v01.webm (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Final_4K_Text_v01.mov (3840x2160)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Final_4K_Text_v01_H264.mov (3840x2160)
Images
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Text_frame.1687_print.jpg (1024x576)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Text_frame.1687.png (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_4K_Text_frame.1687.png (3840x2160)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Text_frame.1687_thm.png (80x40)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Text_frame.1687_searchweb.png (320x180)
Frames
- frames/3840x2160_16x9_60p/FOV/ (3840x2160)
Right click movies to download them if they automatically play in your browser.
Animation showing the TESS spacecraft and the coverage of its four cameras. Each camera covers a 24 degrees-square patch of sky and the four cameras are arranged in a vertical strip called an observation sector.
Movies
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Final_Textless_v01.mov (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Final_Textless_v01-HD_1080p.mov (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Final_Textless_v01.webm (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Final_4K_Textless_v01.mov (3840x2160)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_4K_Textless_v01-H264.mov (3840x2160)
Images
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Textless_frame.1687_print.jpg (1024x576)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH1_Textless_frame.1687.png (1920x1080)
Frames
- frames/3840x2160_16x9_60p/FOV_NoText/ (3840x2160)
Right click movies to download them if they automatically play in your browser.
Same as the above, but without onscreen text.
Movies
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_v01.webm (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_v01.mov (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_v01-HD_1080p.mov (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_4K_H264.mov (3840x2160)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_4K_Text_ProRes.mov (3840x2160)
Images
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Text_frame.3263_print.jpg (1024x576)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Text_frame.3263.png (1920x1080)
Frames
- frames/3840x2160_16x9_60p/Coverage/ (3840x2160)
Right click movies to download them if they automatically play in your browser.
Animation showing how TESS will observe the sky. TESS will watch each observation sector for at least 27 days, before rotating to the next one, covering first the south and then the north to build a map of 85 percent of the sky.
Movies
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_Textless_v01.webm (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_Textless_v01.mov (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_Textless_v01-HD_1080p.mov (1920x1080)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_4K_Textless_v01.mov (3840x2160)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Final_4K_Textless_v01_H264.mov (3840x2160)
Images
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Textless_frame.3263_print.jpg (1024x576)
- TESS_FOVAnimation_SH2_Textless_frame.3263.png (1920x1080)
Frames
- frames/3840x2160_16x9_60p/Coverage_NoText/ (3840x2160)
Right click movies to download them if they automatically play in your browser.
Same as the above, but with no onscreen text.
Credits
Please give credit for this item to:
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/CI Lab
Animator
- Brian Monroe (USRA) [Lead]
Artistic director
- Michael Lentz (KBRwyle)
Producer
- Scott Wiessinger (KBRwyle) [Lead]
Technical support
- Aaron E. Lepsch (ADNET)
Missions
This visualization is related to the following missions:Series
This visualization can be found in the following series:Related pages
Rare Black Hole Event Seen by Satellites and Ground-based Telescopes Live Shots
Sept. 26, 2019, 8 a.m.
Read moreB-roll package that corresponds to the following:SUGGESTED QUESTIONSWhat is a black hole and what did NASA and its partners discover?How does a black hole destroy a star?How did NASA and other observatories work together to capture this moment?What new things did we learn from this catastrophic event?How far away is this black hole? Could our Sun be eaten by a black hole?Black holes are black right? How do scientists study something that can’t be seen?Where can we learn more?QUESTIONS FOR LONGER INTERVIEWS:How does a planet-hunting mission help us learn about black holes?How did the scientists involved first learn about the event?What is #BlackHoleWeek?QUICK LINKS TO VIDEO AND AUDIOClick for downloadable AUDIO SOUNDBITE with NASA Scientist Knicole Colon.Click for downloadable soundbites with NASA Scientist Knicole ColonClick for downloadable soundbites with NASA Scientist Brad CenkoClick for downloadable soundbites with Carnegie astronomer Tom Holoien. || Observatories Collaborate to Catch Star-Gobbling Black HoleNASA’s TESS Sees Its First Star-destroying Black HoleRare Black Hole Event Sheds Light on a Cosmic Mystery For the first time, NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) watched a black hole shred apart and devour a distant star from the moment the violent event began. This phenomenon only happens about once every 10,000 to 100,000 years in a galaxy the size of our own Milky Way! So what is a black hole and how hard is it to watch one destroy a star? Chat with scientists on Friday, Sept. 27, from 6:00 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. EDT to find out how they work together to spot these rare cosmic events and what we’re learning about them. Skype interviews are also available. HERE’s a link to the FEATURE STORY. And HERE for a version of it in Spanish. Scientists know black holes are integral to the life cycle of galaxies, but they’re incredibly difficult to study. Thanks to identification and coordination by the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae [ASAS-SN, pronounced like “assassin”] and observations by TESS and other missions, including NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, astrophysicists are a step closer to understanding some of the most mysterious objects in the universe. Schedule an Interview To schedule an interview please fill out our form: https://forms.gle/rH7Ct9LWqETGB1gC7Interview location: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland Satellite CoordinatesHD Satellite Coordinates for G17-K18/Lower: Galaxy 17 Ku-band Xp 18 Slot Lower| 91.0 ° W Longitude | DL 12051.0 MHz | Vertical Polarity | QPSK/DVB-S | FEC 3/4 | SR 13.235 Mbps | DR 18.2954 MHz | HD 720p | Format MPEG2 | Chroma Level 4:2:0 | Audio Embedded Media contacts for partner institutions:Natasha Metzler / Carnegie Institution, Strategic Communications/ nmetzler@carnegiescience.edu/ (202) 939-1142Laura Arenschield / The Ohio State University, Research Communications / Arenschield.2@osu.eduFor more information check out @NASAUniverse and #BlackHoleWeek Questions? Contact michelle.z.handleman@nasa.gov or 301-286-0918. || Audio soundbite with NASA Scientist Knicole Colon about the discovery. TRT :58. Click download button for this file. || Canned interview with NASA Scientist Knicole Colon. TRT 4:40 || Canned intervew with NASA Scientist Brad Cenko. TRT 4:45 || Canned interview with Carnegie Astronomer Tom Holoien looking off camera. TRT 5:52
NASA’s Newest Planet Hunter To Reveal New Results From Its First Year In Orbit Live Shots
July 25, 2019, 2 a.m.
Read moreB-roll and canned interviews to be added by 7:00 p.m. EDT July 24 || NASA’s Planet Hunter Reveals Exciting Discoveries in the Search for Strange New Worlds Look Up! Planets Orbit All The Stars You Can See In The Night Sky In its first year in orbit, NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS, scanned the skies in the southern hemisphere, where it discovered a variety of strange worlds. Next week, TESS will be unveiling some of its newest and most exciting discoveries about the planets orbiting the stars closest to us.Join NASA scientists on Thursday, August 1 from 6:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. EDT to find out what TESS has discovered so far and how it is contributing to NASA’s search for life. Learn more about what scientists hope to find next, and how your viewers can join scientists and help NASA spot these distant worlds.It wasn’t that long ago that scientists weren’t sure if there were planets orbiting other stars, just as Earth orbits the Sun. With help from telescopes both in space and on the ground, we now know that our galaxy is teeming with exoplanets, or planets that lie beyond our solar system. In fact, when you look up at the night sky, consider that just about every star you see might have at least one planet orbiting it...maybe many more.NASA is diving deeper into the search for planets orbiting nearby stars with TESS and now as it enters year two, it will turn its gaze to the northern hemisphere, hunting for planets that orbit some of the stars we see each night with the naked eye.*** To schedule an interview, fill out this form: https://forms.gle/Ln2PY6mCQ4sVmGxv9 ***The Massachusetts Institute of Technology will be hosting the first science conference for TESS results the week of July 29th. Scientists will be available for in-person interviews Wednesday, July 31st from 2:00-4:00 and 4:30-6:30 p.m. ET. For more information click here: https://tsc.mit.edu/outreach.html. To RSVP email: Natalia Guerrero at nmg @mit.edu.suggested questions1)TESS has spent its first year scanning the skies for strange new worlds. What fascinating things did it discover? 2)How does TESS look for planets around other stars? 3)What are you excited for TESS to find as it turns to our local skies? 4)Traveling to even the closest stars would still take hundreds of thousands of years with our current technology. How are these distant planets relevant to us? 5)NASA is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the first Moon landing, with future plans to take astronauts to the Moon and then to Mars. What will studying the Moon and Mars up close tell us about planets around other stars? 6)How can our viewers learn more about this mission and get involved in looking for exoplanets?satellite coordinates HD Satellite Coordinates for G17-K18/Lower: Galaxy 17 Ku-band Xp 18 Slot Lower| 91.0 ° W Longitude | DL 12051.0 MHz | Vertical Polarity | QPSK/DVB-S | FEC 3/4 | SR 13.235 Mbps | DR 18.2954 MHz | HD 720p | Format MPEG2 | Chroma Level 4:2:0 | Audio Embedded*** Questions? Contact Courtney.a.lee@nasa.gov or 301-286-3131.***Keep up to date on the latest with TESS on Twitter @NASA_TESS! || B-roll for the suggested questions in the live shot:1. TESS has spent its first year scanning the skies for strange worlds. What fascinating things did it discover?2. How does TESS look for planets around other stars?3. What are you excited for TESS to find as it turns to our local skies? 4. Traveling to even the closest stars would still take hundreds of thousands of years with our current technology. How are these distant planets relevant to us? 5. NASA is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the first Moon landing, with future plans to take astronauts to the Moon and then to Mars. What will studying the Moon and Mars up close tell us about planets around other stars? 6. How can our viewers learn more about this mission and get involved in looking for exoplanets? || Canned interview with NASA Scientist Michelle Thaller. Answers are separated by a slate. TRT 4:26
TESS-Kepler Field-of-View Animation
March 28, 2018, 8:45 a.m.
Read moreThis animation compares the fields-of-view of NASA s full two-year coverage appears, starting in the southern hemisphere and ending in the northern hemisphere. Finally, the map is rewrapped into a sphere.Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/T. Pyle (IPAC)
NASA's New Planet Hunter: TESS
March 28, 2018, 9 a.m.
Read moreWatch an overview of the TESS mission.Music: from Killer TracksWatch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel.Complete transcript available. || NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) will find undiscovered worlds around bright nearby stars, providing targets where future studies will assess their capacity to harbor life. TESS is a NASA Astrophysics Explorer mission led and operated by MIT and managed by Goddard. With the help of a gravitational assist from the Moon, the spacecraft will settle into a 13.7-day orbit around Earth. Four wide-field cameras will give TESS a field-of-view that covers 85 percent of the entire sky. Within this vast visual perspective, the sky has been divided into 26 sectors that TESS will observe one by one. The first year of observations will map the 13 sectors encompassing the southern sky, and the second year will map the 13 sectors of the northern sky. The spacecraft will be looking for a phenomenon known as a transit, where a planet passes in front of its star, causing a periodic and regular dip in the star’s brightness. NASA’s Kepler spacecraft used the same method to spot more than 2,600 confirmed exoplanets, most of them orbiting faint stars 300 to 3,000 light-years away TESS will concentrate on stars less than 300 light-years away and 30 to 100 times brighter than Kepler’s targets. The brightness of these target stars will allow researchers to use spectroscopy, the study of the absorption and emission of light, to determine a planet’s mass, density and atmospheric composition. Water and other key molecules in its atmosphere can give us hints about a planets’ capacity to harbor life.