Polski

NASA will demonstrate laser communications on the space station to improve space communications capabilities

130
2023-09-04 17:12:37
Zobacz tłumaczenie

Recently, in order to improve the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) space communications capabilities, NASA plans to send a technology demonstration called "Integrated LCRD Low Earth Orbit User Modem and Amplifier Terminal (ILLUMA-T)" to the space station in 2023. 

ILLUMA-T and the Laser Communications Relay Demonstration (LCRD), launched in December 2021, will together complete NASA's first two-way end-to-end laser relay system.

(Photo credit: NASA)

Advantages of laser communication systems

Laser communication systems use invisible infrared light to send and receive information at higher data transfer rates. It took about nine weeks for the original radio frequency system to transmit a complete map of Mars back to Earth, while it took about nine days using lasers. As a result, with higher data transfer rates, missions can send more images and videos to Earth in a single transmission. 

Once installed on the space station, ILLUMA-T will demonstrate the benefits of higher data transfer rates for low-Earth orbit missions. Laser communications provide greater flexibility for missions, as well as a quick way to get data from space. NASA is currently integrating this technology in near-Earth, lunar and deep space demonstrations.

In addition to the advantages of faster data transmission rates, laser systems also have key advantages in spacecraft design due to their lighter weight and lower energy consumption. ILLUMA-T, which is about the size of a standard refrigerator, will be attached to the station's external module for demonstration via LCRD. 

Currently, LCRD is demonstrating the benefits of laser relay in geosynchronous orbit (22,000 miles above Earth), further refining NASA's laser capabilities by transmitting data between two ground stations and conducting experiments. Once ILLUMA-T is aboard the space station, the terminal will send high-resolution data, including pictures and video, to the LCRD at a rate of 1,200 megabits per second. The data will then be sent from LCRD to ground stations in Hawaii and California. This demonstration will show how laser communication can benefit low-Earth orbit missions.

ILLUMA-T is being launched as a payload on SpaceX's 29th commercial resupply services mission for NASA. During the first two weeks after launch, ILLUMA-T will be removed from the trunk of the Dragon spacecraft and installed on the station's Japanese Experimental Module Exposure Facility (JEM-EF). 

Once the payload is installed, the ILLUMA-T team will conduct initial testing and on-orbit inspections. Once that's done, the team will launch an onslaught of the payload's first light - a major milestone for the mission that will transmit the first laser beam to the LCRD through its optical telescope. Once the first light appears, data transmission and laser communication experiments will begin and continue throughout the planned mission.

Test lasers in different scenarios

In the future, operational laser communications will complement the radio frequency systems that many space missions still rely on to transmit data back to Earth. While ILLUMA-T is not the first mission to test laser communications in space, it brings NASA one step closer to actually applying the technology.

In addition to LCRD, ILLUMA-T's predecessors include: the 2022 TeraByte InfraRed Delivery system, which is currently testing laser communication on small Cubesats in low Earth orbit; Lunar laser communication demonstration to transmit data to and from lunar orbit and Earth during the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer mission in 2014; And 2017 Lasercomm Science's optical payload, which demonstrates how laser communication can speed up the flow of information between Earth and space compared to radio signals.

Testing the ability of laser communications to generate higher data transfer rates in a variety of scenarios will help the aerospace community further refine the capabilities of future missions to the moon, Mars and deep space.

Source: OFweek

Powiązane rekomendacje
  • Researchers have implemented a creative approach to reduce stray light using spatial locking technology based on periodic shadows

    Reducing stray light is one of the main challenges in combustion experiments using laser beams (such as Raman spectroscopy) for detection. By using a combination of ultrafast laser pulses and gated ICCD or emICCD cameras, a time filter can be effectively used to remove bright and constant flame backgrounds. When the signal reaches the detector, these cameras can open electronic shutters within the...

    2023-10-16
    Zobacz tłumaczenie
  • Progress in the study of ultrafast electron dynamics using short light pulses

    When electrons move in molecules or semiconductors, their time scale is unimaginably short. The Swedish German team, including Dr. Jan Vogelsang from the University of Oldenburg, has made significant progress in these ultrafast processes: researchers are able to track the dynamics of electrons released on the surface of zinc oxide crystals using laser pulses with nanoscale spatial resolution and p...

    2024-01-08
    Zobacz tłumaczenie
  • Han's Laser wins multiple lithium battery projects

    Recently, relevant information shows that Shenzhen Han's Lithium Battery Intelligent Equipment Co., Ltd. (referred to as Han's Lithium Battery) has won the bid for the solid-state battery pilot line testing section process equipment project and solid-state battery pilot line assembly section process equipment project of Dongfeng Hongtai Holdings Group Co., Ltd. The winning bid amounts are 9.3847 m...

    2024-09-28
    Zobacz tłumaczenie
  • Romania Center launches the world's most powerful laser

    Are you ready? The signal is out! "In the control room of a research center in Romania, engineer Antonio Toma has activated the world's most powerful laser, which is expected to make revolutionary progress in various fields from the health sector to space. The laser located in the center near the Romanian capital Bucharest is operated by the French company Thales and utilizes the invention of Nobe...

    2024-04-01
    Zobacz tłumaczenie
  • Researchers have reinvented laser free magnetic control

    In a significant advancement in material physics, researchers from Germany and the United States have theoretically demonstrated that only extremely thin materials need to be α- RuCl3 can be placed in an optical cavity to control its magnetic state.This discovery may pave the way for new methods of controlling material properties without the use of strong lasers.The Role of Optical Vacuum W...

    2023-11-09
    Zobacz tłumaczenie