Washington: During its two-year-long primary mission, NASA's planet-hunter TESS has found 66 new exoplanets, or worlds beyond our solar system, as well as nearly 2,100 candidates astronomers are working to confirm, the US space agency has said.
TESS, short for Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, scanned about 75 percent of the starry sky during its primary mission that ended on July 4, NASA said on Tuesday.
"TESS is producing a torrent of high-quality observations providing valuable data across a wide range of science topics," said Patricia Boyd, the project scientist for TESS at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
"As it enters its extended mission, TESS is already a roaring success."
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TESS monitors 24-by-96-degree strips of the sky called sectors for about a month using its four cameras.
The mission spent its first year observing 13 sectors comprising the southern sky and then spent another year imaging the northern sky.
Now in its extended mission, TESS has turned around to resume surveying the south, NASA said.