Message from space: NASA receives data from 16 million kilometers away

Communication with outer space
With infrared for faster communication
On board the
Launched in mid-October
Message from DSOC
Data can be sent 10 to 100 times faster
Data to Hale Telescope
40 times further than the moon
Further than ever before
Laser beam into space
Aiming for the target
The first step in sending humans to Mars
Communication with outer space

The fact that people will eventually live on Mars is more than a dream, for some people it is a concrete idea for the future. Good communication with Earth would then be important. Perhaps this will soon become a reality, as the US space agency NASA launched an experiment in which it received a message from space from 16 million kilometers away.

With infrared for faster communication

NASA has started the “Deep Space Optical Communications”, or DSOC for short, project, which aims to increase the speed of communication using infrared or other high light frequencies, according to the NASA website.

On board the "Psyche"

The DSCO experiment is currently on board "Psyche", a NASA probe that is traveling to catch humanity's first glimpse of the the metal-rich asteroid (also named Psyche) between the planets Mars and Jupiter.

Launched in mid-October

Psyche was launched in mid-October, and the spacecraft is expected to  spend the following six years traveling about 2.2 billion miles (3.6 billion kilometers) to reach its the asteroid also named Psyche, located in the outer part of the main asteroid belt.

Message from DSOC

This means that DSCO, together with "Psyche", is moving further and further away from Earth - and sent a message to Earth for the first time on November 14th.

Data can be sent 10 to 100 times faster

According to NASA, the laser on DSOC can send data at 10 to 100 times the speed of traditional radio wave systems that NASA has used on other missions.

Data to Hale Telescope

Using a near-infrared laser beam, DSOC was able to send a message to Earth. The test data was received from the Hale Telescope in California.

40 times further than the moon

At this point, DSOC was 16 million kilometers from Earth. A distance that is 40 times as far as that from the moon to the earth.

"Still a lot to do"

Meera Srinivisan, who leads the DSOC project, said: "It was a big challenge and we still have a lot of work to do, but for a short period of time we were able to send, receive and decode data."

Further than ever before

This is the largest distance over which a message has been transferred using optical communication to date.

Laser beam into space

In order for DSOC to send the message to Earth, a laser beam had to be sent into space from the telescope on Earth.

Aiming for the target

Using this laser beam, DSOC was able to home in on the target on Earth and begin communication.

The first step in sending humans to Mars

In fact, according to Trudy Kortes, director of technology demonstrations at NASA, says this is just the first step. As reported by CBS News, Kortes said that in the future, it should be possible to send “scientific information, high-definition imagery, and streaming video in support of humanity's next giant leap: sending humans to Mars."

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