owlankar - {31}
{31}

Only for love

186 posts

Latest Posts by owlankar - Page 4

4 years ago

Ash con novio, Austin con novia, quizás volverán a estar juntos?

4 years ago
Self Care

Self care

4 years ago
Mood All Day, Everyday.

Mood all day, everyday.

4 years ago

“A veces me alejo porque no encuentro forma de quedarme.”

4 years ago

Listening to Hollywood's Bleeding like

Listening To Hollywood's Bleeding Like
Listening To Hollywood's Bleeding Like
4 years ago
Violet Y Finch / Jennifer Niven

Violet y Finch / Jennifer Niven

4 years ago

“—No hagas esto. No seas así. —No puedo evitarlo. Soy lo que soy. Ya te avisé de que esto pasaría.”

— Jennifer Niven, Violet y Finch.

4 years ago
owlankar - {31}
owlankar - {31}
4 years ago
owlankar - {31}
4 years ago
Raquel Beck
Raquel Beck
Raquel Beck
Raquel Beck

Raquel Beck

4 years ago

Cuando es amplitud de un tono es LA AMPLITUD DE MENSAJE

4 years ago

Es tan frustante ser tan incapaz...

5 years ago

Optical Communications: Explore Lasers in Space

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When we return to the Moon, much will seem unchanged since humans first arrived in 1969. The flags placed by Apollo astronauts will be untouched by any breeze. The footprints left by man’s “small step” on its surface will still be visible across the Moon’s dusty landscape.

Our next generation of lunar explorers will require pioneering innovation alongside proven communications technologies. We’re developing groundbreaking technologies to help these astronauts fulfill their missions.

In space communications networks, lasers will supplement traditional radio communications, providing an advancement these explorers require. The technology, called optical communications, has been in development by our engineers over decades.

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Optical communications, in infrared, has a higher frequency than radio, allowing more data to be encoded into each transmission. Optical communications systems also have reduced size, weight and power requirements. A smaller system leaves more room for science instruments; a weight reduction can mean a less expensive launch, and reduced power allows batteries to last longer.

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On the path through this “Decade of Light,” where laser joins radio to enable mission success, we must test and demonstrate a number of optical communications innovations.

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The Laser Communications Relay Demonstration (LCRD) mission will send data between ground stations in Hawaii and California through a spacecraft in an orbit stationary relative to Earth’s rotation. The demo will be an important first step in developing next-generation Earth-relay satellites that can support instruments generating too much data for today’s networks to handle.

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The Integrated LCRD Low-Earth Orbit User Modem and Amplifier-Terminal will provide the International Space Station with a fully operational optical communications system. It will communicate data from the space station to the ground through LCRD. The mission applies technologies from previous optical communications missions for practical use in human spaceflight.

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In deep space, we’re working to prove laser technologies with our Deep Space Optical Communications mission. A laser’s wavelength is smaller than radio, leaving less margin for error in pointing back at Earth from very, very far away. Additionally, as the time it takes for data to reach Earth increases, satellites need to point ahead to make sure the beam reaches the right spot at the right time. The Deep Space Optical Communications mission will ensure that our communications engineers can meet those challenges head-on.

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An integral part of our journey back to the Moon will be our Orion spacecraft. It looks remarkably similar to the Apollo capsule, yet it hosts cutting-edge technologies. NASA’s Laser Enhanced Mission Communications Navigation and Operational Services (LEMNOS) will provide Orion with data rates as much as 100 times higher than current systems.

LEMNOS’s optical terminal, the Orion EM-2 Optical Communications System, will enable live, 4K ultra-high-definition video from the Moon. By comparison, early Apollo cameras filmed only 10 frames per second in grainy black-and-white. Optical communications will provide a “giant leap” in communications technology, joining radio for NASA’s return to the Moon and the journey beyond.

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NASA’s Space Communications and Navigation program office provides strategic oversight to optical communications research. At NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, the Exploration and Space Communications projects division is guiding a number of optical communications technologies from infancy to fruition. If you’re ever near Goddard, stop by our visitor center to check out our new optical communications exhibit. For more information, visit nasa.gov/SCaN and esc.gsfc.nasa.gov.

5 years ago
“Major Tom” By NautilusD

“Major Tom” by NautilusD

5 years ago
Drive With Me
Drive With Me

drive with me

5 years ago
Milk And Honey “Outlook”

Milk and honey “Outlook”

5 years ago

“No juzgues a alguien por no quedarse, no juzgues la decisión de los demás. Todo tiene un porqué y sobre todo un para qué. Tal vez hoy no entiendas, pero pronto lo harás.”

— Cartas de motivación, Erick Glez

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