TESS All-Sky Mosaic Unveils 700 Exoplanets, 5,000 Candidates, Expanding Cosmic Discoveries

May 14, 2026
TESS All-Sky Mosaic Unveils 700 Exoplanets, 5,000 Candidates, Expanding Cosmic Discoveries
  • The release emphasizes TESS’s role in expanding the exoplanet catalog and advancing understanding of planetary systems beyond our Solar System.

  • TESS surveys the sky sector by sector, spending about a month on each sector, using four cameras to monitor tens of thousands of stars for dips in brightness indicating transiting planets.

  • As of late 2025, TESS and other missions have identified or confirmed nearly 6,000 exoplanets, reflecting ongoing discoveries into a second extended mission.

  • Quotes from Rebekah Hounsell and Allison Youngblood underscore the mission’s impact and its promising future.

  • The image features extreme worlds, including volcanic planets, planets torn apart by their stars, and planets orbiting binary star systems with two suns.

  • The mosaic reveals nearly 700 confirmed exoplanets as blue dots and more than 5,000 candidates in orange, showcasing a broad range of planetary systems awaiting verification.

  • Experts note that TESS data, enhanced by automated algorithms, continues to yield surprising findings not only about exoplanets but also about young stars, galactic dynamics, and near-Earth asteroids.

  • NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) released its most complete all-sky mosaic to date, covering 96 sectors observed from 2018 through 2025.

  • Readers are invited to join the Planet Hunters TESS citizen-science project to learn how to read light curves and spot exoplanet signals.

  • The mosaic also highlights the dense central plane of the Milky Way, illustrating the survey’s vast reach and scale.

  • The mosaic also showcases the Milky Way’s bright plane and the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, lying roughly 160,000 and 200,000 light-years away.

Summary based on 2 sources


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