NASA releases alien life-finding satellite

NASA is set to issue an exploration of satellites (TESS) from Monday, starting a new chapter in search of the planet that would potentially adapt to alien life. During this mission, T The ESS will analyze thousands of planets orbiting the stars. According to NASA, scientists expect to find about 50 planets with [...]
During this mission, T The ESS will analyze thousands of planets orbiting the stars.
According to NASA, scientists expect to find about 50 earth-sized planets and about 20, 000 exotic planets, which most of them may be slightly larger than Neptune, the fourth largest planet in our solar system.
Eczoplanes are planets orbiting a star except the sun.
T The ESS will be sent inside the SpaceX board Falcon 9, whose launch is scheduled to take place at 10:30 at the Cape Canaveral Station in Florence.
It will take two weeks for the satellite to arrive in the planned orbit and eventually be closer to the moon, reports “Al Jazeera”, the Periscope broadcast.
After two months of testing and calibration, T The ESS will begin a two-year mission examining 200,000 stars for finding exotics.
Based on star-named light, the satellite will be able to catalog thousands of planets, NASA said.
By combining information with data from telescopes on earth, scientists will be able to identify the composition and size of those planets.
Scientists estimate that some 100 billion galaxies exist in the universe./Periscopi/
Launchingday, our planet-hunting @NASA TESS Spacecraft will fly in a single orbit that will all flow it to the nation's entire sky over 2 years. This special orbit is this in the very potential workings of new planets outside our solar system. Watch: Pic.twitter. com/2 O NGXweAji
) NASA (@NASA) April 16, 2018












