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Telescope Tango: A 'Pi in the Sky' Math Challenge

Lesson .

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Telescope Tango: A 'Pi in the Sky' Math Challenge

Jet Propulsion Laboratory https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ Last Updated: June 20, 2025
Subject
Math
Grade Levels
6-12
Time Required
30 - 60 mins
Standards .
Math Standards (CCSS - Math)
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Reason quantitatively and use units to solve problems.

Understand ratio concepts and use ratio reasoning to solve problems.

Overview

The "Pi in the Sky" math challenge gives students a chance to take part in recent discoveries and upcoming celestial events, all while using math and pi just like NASA scientists and engineers. In this problem from the ninth set, students use the mathematical constant pi to calculate how far the TESS spacecraft travels as it sends data to Earth.

Materials

  • Pi in the Sky 9: Telescope Tango worksheet – download PDF
  • Pi in the Sky 9: Telescope Tango answer key – download PDF (also available as a text-only doc)

Background

A spacecraft points to a glowing orange star that has a red planet orbiting it.
Illustration of NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS.
Credit: NASA

Telescope Tango

The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS, is designed to survey the sky in search of planets orbiting bright, nearby stars. TESS does this while circling Earth in a unique, never-before-used orbit that brings the spacecraft close to Earth about once every two weeks to transmit its data. This special orbit keeps TESS stable while giving it an unobstructed view of space. In its first two years, TESS identified more than 2,600 possible exoplanets in our galaxy with thousands more discovered during its extended mission. In Telescope Tango, students will use pi to calculate the distance traveled by TESS each time it sends data back to Earth.

educators.

Teachable Moments: Pi Goes to Infinity and Beyond in NASA Challenge

Learn more about about pi, the history of Pi Day before, and the science behind the 2022 NASA Pi Day Challenge.

Procedures

Telescope Tango

NASA's TESS mission is designed to survey the entire sky in search of exoplanets, or planets orbiting stars other than our Sun. In its two-year primary mission, TESS identified more than 2,600 possible exoplanets and counting.

To locate exoplanets, the space telescope flies in a highly eccentric elliptical orbit, which had never been attempted before. This orbit, called P/2, minimizes the amount of time that light and heat from Earth and the Moon can interfere with data collection. And it still allows the spacecraft to make close passes by Earth to transmit data about its findings back to scientists. The spacecraft's 13.7 day orbit has an axis of 376,000 km at apogee and an axis of 108,400 km at perigee. Each downlink from TESS takes about three hours to complete.

While TESS actually moves at different speeds throughout its orbit – from 0.5 km/s at apogee to 4 km/s at perigee – if its velocity stayed uniform, how many kilometers would TESS need to travel to successfully transmit its data?

› Learn more about the TESS mission

https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/edu/images/activities/piday2022_tess_handout.png

Assessment

Illustrated answer key for the Telescope Tango problem

› Download text-only answer key (doc)

Extensions

Participate

Join the conversation and share your Pi Day Challenge answers with @NASAJPL_Edu on social media using the hashtag #NASAPiDayChallenge

educators.

Pi in the Sky Lessons

Here's everything you need to bring the NASA Pi Day Challenge into the classroom.

students.

Slideshow: NASA Pi Day Challenge

The entire NASA Pi Day Challenge collection can be found in one, handy slideshow for students.

Blogs and Features

students.

How Many Decimals of Pi Do We Really Need?

While you may have memorized more than 70,000 digits of pi, world record holders, a JPL engineer explains why you really only need a tiny fraction of that for most calculations.

students.

Slideshow: 18 Ways NASA Uses Pi

Whether it's sending spacecraft to other planets, driving rovers on Mars, finding out what planets are made of or how deep alien oceans are, pi takes us far at NASA. Find out how pi helps us explore space.

Related Lessons for Educators

educators.

Exploring Exoplanets with Kepler

Students use math concepts related to transits to discover real-world data about Mercury, Venus and planets outside our solar system.

Multimedia

educators.

Downloads

Can't get enough pi? Download this year's NASA Pi Day Challenge graphics, including mobile phone and desktop backgrounds:

students.

Infographic: Planet Pi

This poster shows some of the ways NASA scientists and engineers use the mathematical constant pi (3.14) and includes common pi formulas.

Recursos en español

students.

18 Maneras en Que la NASA Usa Pi

Pi nos lleva lejos en la NASA. Estas son solo algunas de las formas en que pi nos ayuda a explorar el espacio.

Facts and Figures

  • Exoplanet Discoveries Dashboard

Missions and Instruments

  • TESS Mission

Websites

  • Exoplanets Exploration
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