Two main NASA missions which have launched previously 12 months are revealing a communications weak spot in space.
NASA communicates with all of its distant spacecraft — from the Orion capsule to the James Webb Space Telescope (Webb or JWST) to Voyager 1 — by means of the Deep House Community, a set of 14 antennas situated at three websites in California, Spain and Australia. However the community is busy, and guaranteeing that each mission past Earth orbit has the communications time it wants will be difficult, a problem that the Artemis 1 mission has exacerbated.
“We had been advised over the summer season that when the Artemis space mission launched, the Deep House Community was going to be mainly totally taken by Artemis as a result of they wanted to maintain observe of the spaceship,” Mercedes López-Morales, an astrophysicist on the Harvard Smithsonian Heart for Astrophysics and the chair of the JWST Customers Committee, advised a gathering of the U.S. Nationwide Academies of Sciences’ Board on Physics and Astronomy on Wednesday (Nov. 30).
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The time got here on Nov. 16, when NASA launched Artemis 1 . A check flight to kick off the company’s return to the moon, the 25-day mission despatched an uncrewed Orion capsule to lunar orbit and is scheduled to splash down Earth on Dec. 11.
Whereas Orion is in flight and past low Earth orbit, it is in near-constant contact with the Deep House Community — a serious drain that has put the James Webb House Telescope and different missions within the backseat. NASA has recognized Artemis would pressure the Deep House Community; the company organized upgrades to some antennas and added two new ones in January 2021 and March 2022 in preparation.
However communications time continues to be scarce. “It could possibly be as much as 80 hours — that is about three and a half days — of no contact with JWST in any respect,” López-Morales stated she was advised earlier than Artemis 1’s launch.
JWST scientists normally ship instructions to the $10 billion observatory about as soon as per week, she advised the board, so rare communications would not have an effect on the observatory getting its directions. However for astronomers to really get pleasure from Webb’s energy, the telescope wants to have the ability to beam dwelling its knowledge — and achieve this earlier than its laptop fills up.
“The large difficulty is that you just can’t obtain knowledge for that lengthy,” López-Morales stated.
For Artemis 1, she stated, the House Telescope Science Institute in Maryland, which operates each JWST and the Hubble Space Telescope , rejiggered JWST’s observing schedule. Scientists prioritized shorter observations, which create smaller batches of information, to scale back the probabilities of the telescope’s laptop filling up earlier than the Deep House Community can settle for the subsequent batch of information.
However as a result of NASA plans further Artemis launches — and these with people aboard — in 2024 and past, scientists need a totally different resolution to the communications logjam.
“We’re desperately asking NASA to provide you with a plan to by some means have extra entry to antennas,” López-Morales stated.
E mail Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or comply with her on Twitter @ meghanbartels . Comply with us on Twitter @ Spacedotcom and on Facebook .