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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite

George R. Ricker, +63 more
- 24 Oct 2014 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 1, pp 014003-014003
TLDR
The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) as discussed by the authors will search for planets transiting bright and nearby stars using four wide-field optical charge-coupled device cameras to monitor at least 200,000 main-sequence dwarf stars.
Abstract
The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) will search for planets transiting bright and nearby stars. TESS has been selected by NASA for launch in 2017 as an Astrophysics Explorer mission. The spacecraft will be placed into a highly elliptical 13.7-day orbit around the Earth. During its 2-year mission, TESS will employ four wide-field optical charge-coupled device cameras to monitor at least 200,000 main-sequence dwarf stars with I C ≈4−13 for temporary drops in brightness caused by planetary transits. Each star will be observed for an interval ranging from 1 month to 1 year, depending mainly on the star’s ecliptic latitude. The longest observing intervals will be for stars near the ecliptic poles, which are the optimal locations for follow-up observations with the James Webb Space Telescope. Brightness measurements of preselected target stars will be recorded every 2 min, and full frame images will be recorded every 30 min. TESS stars will be 10 to 100 times brighter than those surveyed by the pioneering Kepler mission. This will make TESS planets easier to characterize with follow-up observations. TESS is expected to find more than a thousand planets smaller than Neptune, including dozens that are comparable in size to the Earth. Public data releases will occur every 4 months, inviting immediate community-wide efforts to study the new planets. The TESS legacy will be a catalog of the nearest and brightest stars hosting transiting planets, which will endure as highly favorable targets for detailed investigations.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Occurrence of Potentially Habitable Planets Orbiting M Dwarfs Estimated from the Full Kepler Dataset and an Empirical Measurement of the Detection Sensitivity

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented an improved estimate of the occurrence rate of small planets orbiting small stars by searching the full four-year Kepler data set for transiting planets using their own planet detection pipeline and conducting transit injection and recovery simulations to empirically measure the search completeness of their pipeline.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Occurrence and Architecture of Exoplanetary Systems

TL;DR: A review of the current knowledge of the occurrence of planets around other stars, their orbital distances and eccentricities, the orbital spacings and mutual inclinations in multi-planet systems, the orientation of the host star's rotation axis, and the properties of planets in binary-star systems can be found in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

The TESS Input Catalog and Candidate Target List

TL;DR: The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) will conduct a nearly all-sky photometric survey over two years, with a core mission goal to discover small transiting exoplanets orbiting nearby bright stars as discussed by the authors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Jhklm photometry: standard systems, passbands, and intrinsic colors

TL;DR: In this paper, the relations between colors of the JHKL systems of several observatories are examined, and linear relations are derived for transformation between the (J-K), (H, K, H, and L) colors in the different systems.

Solar system dynamics

TL;DR: In this paper, the two-body problem and the restricted three body problem are considered. But the disturbing function is defined as a special case of the two body problem and is not considered in this paper.
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Practical Numerical Algorithms for Chaotic Systems

TL;DR: The goal of this book is to present an elementary introduction on chaotic systems for the non-specialist, and to present and extensive package of computer algorithms for simulating and characterizing chaotic phenomena.
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