LLCD is being flown aboard the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer
satellite known as LADEE, currently orbiting the moon. LADEE is a 100-day
robotic mission designed, built, tested and operated by a team from NASA’s Ames
Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. Its primary science mission is to
investigate the tenuous and exotic atmosphere that exists around the moon.
LADEE, with LLCD onboard, reached lunar orbit 30 days after launch from
NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Va., on Sept. 6. During the
trip, the LADEE team provided an opportunity for LLCD to make post-flight
calibrations of its pointing knowledge. “Being able to make those calibrations
allowed us to lock onto our signal almost instantaneously when we turned on the
laser at the moon,” said Cornwell. “A critical part of laser communication is
being able to point the narrow laser beam at a very small target over a great
distance.”
LLCD not only demonstrated a record-breaking download rate but also an
error-free data upload rate of 20 Mbps. The laser beam was transmitted the
239,000 miles from the primary ground station at NASA’s White Sands Complex in
Las Cruces N.M., to the LADEE spacecraft in lunar orbit. This breakthrough
technology has a laser-based space terminal that is half the weight of a
comparable radio-based terminal while using 25 percent less power.
These first tests of the month-long demonstration have included the
successful LLCD transmission, by pulsed laser beam, of two simultaneous channels
carrying high-definition video streams to and from the moon. Proving the
capability to communicate with multiple locations, LLCD successfully transmitted
its beam several times to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Optical
Communications Telescope Laboratory in California. Soon testing will also
include transmissions originating from the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Optical
Ground Station in Tenerife, Spain.
The tests also confirmed LLCD’s capability of providing continuous
measurements of the distance from the Earth to the LADEE spacecraft with an
unprecedented accuracy of less than half an inch. “We hope this demonstration
validates the capabilities and builds confidence in laser communication
technology for consideration on future missions,” said Cornwell.
LLCD has also transmitted large data files from the LADEE spacecraft computer
to Earth. “These first results have far exceeded our expectation,” said
Cornwell. “Just imagine the ability to transmit huge amounts of data that would
take days in a matter of minutes. We believe laser-based communications is the
next paradigm shift in future space communications.”
Future testing will include how well the system operates in optically
stressed conditions such as daytime (all operations have been at night), full
moon verses new moon, and different pointing positions for the ground terminals.
“These series of tests will allow us to sample different conditions to
demonstrate the flexibility of the technology,” said Cornwell.
The LLCD system was designed, built and being operated by the MIT/LL team in
Lexington, Mass. LLCD is managed by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Md. The LADEE spacecraft was built and operated by NASA’s Ames
Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. Additional ground terminals have been
provided by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and ESA in
Darmstadt, Germany.
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