WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.000 [Music] 2 00:00:04.000 --> 00:00:08.000 [Music] 3 00:00:08.000 --> 00:00:12.000 [Music] 4 00:00:12.000 --> 00:00:16.000 Hi there and welcome to NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt Maryland - home to 5 00:00:16.000 --> 00:00:20.000 the nation’s largest organization of scientists, engineers, and technologists. 6 00:00:20.000 --> 00:00:24.000 Our work encompasses the core disciplines of Earth science, 7 00:00:24.000 --> 00:00:28.000 planetary science, heliophysics, which is the study of the Sun and space weather, 8 00:00:28.000 --> 00:00:32.000 and astrophysics, which covers the whole cosmos.   9 00:00:32.000 --> 00:00:36.000 These lines of businesses have helped guide the success of several notable missions, 10 00:00:36.000 --> 00:00:40.000 including the Hubble Space Telescope, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution Mission, 11 00:00:40.000 --> 00:00:44.000 OSIRIS-REx, which is on its way back to Earth with a sample of an asteroid, 12 00:00:44.000 --> 00:00:48.000 and a host of other satellites that monitor Earth, our changing climate 13 00:00:48.000 --> 00:00:52.000 and the dynamic universe. 14 00:00:52.000 --> 00:00:56.000 My name is Travis Wohlrab, and I’m an engagement officer here at Goddard. 15 00:00:56.000 --> 00:01:00.000 And I’m Courtney Lee, a video producer here at the flight center. Our campus 16 00:01:00.000 --> 00:01:04.000 at Greenbelt contains thirty-four buildings over twelve hundred acres, 17 00:01:04.000 --> 00:01:08.000 which translates to over three million square feet of research space. 18 00:01:08.000 --> 00:01:12.000 but Goddard consists of more than just the Greenbelt campus. 19 00:01:12.000 --> 00:01:16.000 We have five other locations: Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia the Goddard 20 00:01:16.000 --> 00:01:20.000 Institute for Space Studies in New York the Katherine Johnson Independent 21 00:01:20.000 --> 00:01:24.000 Verification and Validation Facility in West Virginia the Columbia Scientific 22 00:01:24.000 --> 00:01:28.000 Balloon Facility in Texas, and the White Sands Complex in New Mexico. 23 00:01:28.000 --> 00:01:32.000 Today we’re going take a tour of some of our facilities. 24 00:01:32.000 --> 00:01:36.000 A substantial amount of work is required to get a mission off the ground. Goddard is unique 25 00:01:36.000 --> 00:01:40.000 in that every element of a mission can be facilitated here; from designing, 26 00:01:40.000 --> 00:01:44.000 manufacturing, launching, controlling, and ultimately gathering 27 00:01:44.000 --> 00:01:48.000 and analyzing data, this NASA facility is a one-stop-shop! 28 00:01:48.000 --> 00:01:52.000 Our first stop is at the Visitor Center where everyone can come and learn 29 00:01:52.000 --> 00:01:56.000 about what we do. From strolling through our Rocket Garden to immersing yourself 30 00:01:56.000 --> 00:02:00.000 in our Solarium which explores our Sun through art and technology, 31 00:02:00.000 --> 00:02:04.000 the Visitor Center has multiple interactive exhibits for people to learn more 32 00:02:04.000 --> 00:02:08.000 more about Goddard’s research. Travis: But the Visitor Center isn’t the only place where 33 00:02:08.000 --> 00:02:12.000 you can see our research on display. We’re going to take you behind the gate on an 34 00:02:12.000 --> 00:02:16.000 exclusive tour of our facilities. Come on, let’s go! 35 00:02:16.000 --> 00:02:20.000 [Music Fades] 36 00:02:20.000 --> 00:02:24.000 [Music] Narrator: Before any mission becomes reality, it goes through several stages of development and planning. 37 00:02:24.000 --> 00:02:28.000 At Building 34, scientists think of problems that need to be 38 00:02:28.000 --> 00:02:32.000 solved and get funding to develop practical solutions. 39 00:02:32.000 --> 00:02:36.000 For example, the employees at the Sample Analysis at Mars Suite Investigation, 40 00:02:36.000 --> 00:02:40.000 also known as SAM, examine the habitability of Mars. 41 00:02:40.000 --> 00:02:44.000 I’m here at the SAM Lab, and as you can see, it’s quite a tight space 42 00:02:44.000 --> 00:02:48.000 due to the temporary clean tent. But every day 43 00:02:48.000 --> 00:02:52.000 scientists conduct experiments and investigations to determine if 44 00:02:52.000 --> 00:02:56.000 ancient Mars provided a habitable environment where microbial life might 45 00:02:56.000 --> 00:03:00.000 have thrived. SAM was built on mass spectrometer 46 00:03:00.000 --> 00:03:04.000 technologies that had been developed to explore the atmospheres of Jupiter, 47 00:03:04.000 --> 00:03:08.000 Venus, and Saturn’s moon, Titan. In addition to measuring 48 00:03:08.000 --> 00:03:12.000 atmospheric gases, SAM also measures gases released from rocks and 49 00:03:12.000 --> 00:03:16.000 soils on Mars. Let’s hear more about SAM 50 00:03:16.000 --> 00:03:20.000 from the SAM Deputy Principal Investigator, Charles Malespin. 51 00:03:20.000 --> 00:03:24.000 Here we have the SAM test bed, which is an exact working replica of SAM, which is located 52 00:03:24.000 --> 00:03:28.000 in the Curiosity Rover on Gale Crater Mars. SAM 53 00:03:28.000 --> 00:03:32.000 took about seven years to complete, from a proposal in 2004 to a 54 00:03:32.000 --> 00:03:36.000 2011 launch. and required one hundred fifty people in it’s creation 55 00:03:36.000 --> 00:03:40.000 After landing on Mars in August of 2012 56 00:03:40.000 --> 00:03:44.000 It is still operating on the surface after eight and a half years. 57 00:03:44.000 --> 00:03:48.000 Goddard scientists and engineers 58 00:03:48.000 --> 00:03:52.000 solved problems that arose as SAM was being developed. For example 59 00:03:52.000 --> 00:03:56.000 When the company that was providing the 52 microvalves in SAM went out of business 60 00:03:56.000 --> 00:04:00.000 Goddard stepped up to reinvent the valves, which are still 61 00:04:00.000 --> 00:04:04.000 being used in missions today. In another situation, the turbomolecular pumps 62 00:04:04.000 --> 00:04:08.000 weren’t reaching their planned lifetimes. A Goddard team 63 00:04:08.000 --> 00:04:12.000 worked with the commercial provider to redesign the pumps, and they were still operating on Mars 64 00:04:12.000 --> 00:04:16.000 With SAM and other missions, we focused 65 00:04:16.000 --> 00:04:20.000 on solving problems to create instruments, that will help answer the 66 00:04:20.000 --> 00:04:24.000 questions we have about the universe beyond our planet. Thank you Charles 67 00:04:24.000 --> 00:04:28.000 With missions like SAM and others we implement a project life cycle 68 00:04:28.000 --> 00:04:32.000 where we use scientific findings from current missions to develop 69 00:04:32.000 --> 00:04:36.000 new missions. We head to the Planetary Environments Laboratory, 70 00:04:36.000 --> 00:04:40.000 where a new spacecraft element is being developed. 71 00:04:40.000 --> 00:04:44.000 Narrator: The Planetary Environments Laboratory studies the atmospheres 72 00:04:44.000 --> 00:04:48.000 and surfaces of planetary bodies. Scientists there 73 00:04:48.000 --> 00:04:52.000 participate in all phases of planetary investigation, from developing instruments 74 00:04:52.000 --> 00:04:56.000 to analyzing data sent back to us from spacecraft. 75 00:04:56.000 --> 00:05:00.000 The Planetary Environments Laboratory is the home to a key instrument on Dragonfly 76 00:05:00.000 --> 00:05:04.000 a rotorcraft scheduled to land on Titan, which is Saturn’s largest moon, 77 00:05:04.000 --> 00:05:08.000 in 2034. 78 00:05:08.000 --> 00:05:12.000 [Music] 79 00:05:12.000 --> 00:05:16.000 The team is currently working to design every detail of the craft, and the instruments on 80 00:05:16.000 --> 00:05:20.000 it’s Scientific payload. Here with us is Project Lead Dr. Melissa Trainer 81 00:05:20.000 --> 00:05:24.000 Who will tell us more about Dragonfly. Well we’ve already presented the mission concept 82 00:05:24.000 --> 00:05:28.000 to the rest of NASA, Now our engineering team is hard at work 83 00:05:28.000 --> 00:05:32.000 making sure we’ve thought through all the potential problems in the design. 84 00:05:32.000 --> 00:05:36.000 In this phase, it’s a lot like going from an architect’s sketch of a house, 85 00:05:36.000 --> 00:05:40.000 to a blueprint where every beam and outlet are clearly marked. 86 00:05:40.000 --> 00:05:44.000 We end up spending a lot of time in this stage, where we test 87 00:05:44.000 --> 00:05:48.000 prototypes and plan details, because we want to get it right 88 00:05:48.000 --> 00:05:52.000 before actually build the spacecraft and the instruments. 89 00:05:52.000 --> 00:05:56.000 An example of one design change we’ve experienced, comes with the instrument that drills 90 00:05:56.000 --> 00:06:00.000 samples from the Titan surface, and how it brings them to the Dragonfly 91 00:06:00.000 --> 00:06:04.000 mass spectrometer, which is the instrument we’re building here. At first, 92 00:06:04.000 --> 00:06:08.000 the delivery system was designed to look like a funnel to dump samples on to a tray. 93 00:06:08.000 --> 00:06:12.000 But then we realized there were a couple of problems with that model. 94 00:06:12.000 --> 00:06:16.000 First, Titan’s samples can be sticky, especially if you warm 95 00:06:16.000 --> 00:06:20.000 them up compared to the Titan surface, and it would be hard to clear them off 96 00:06:20.000 --> 00:06:24.000 the tray before more samples are taken. Second, the gravity 97 00:06:24.000 --> 00:06:28.000 on Titan is low compared to Earth, and we can’t rely on the samples 98 00:06:28.000 --> 00:06:32.000 settling easily on the tray. So instead we came up with a 99 00:06:32.000 --> 00:06:36.000 new design that catches particles from a stream, into a cup 100 00:06:36.000 --> 00:06:40.000 and moves them into a chamber. We’ve also worked a detailed design 101 00:06:40.000 --> 00:06:44.000 where the sample chamber sides stays cold, like the surface of Titan, 102 00:06:44.000 --> 00:06:48.000 While the mass spectrometer side stays warmer. 103 00:06:48.000 --> 00:06:52.000 This interface is critical to getting the best measurements of Titan’s surface samples 104 00:06:52.000 --> 00:06:56.000 and it has already been through testing here at Goddard. Now, our team 105 00:06:56.000 --> 00:07:00.000 is continuing the work to make sure that everything fits into the 106 00:07:00.000 --> 00:07:04.000 rotorcraft lander in a way that makes sense and allows us to accomplish 107 00:07:04.000 --> 00:07:08.000 our science mission on Titan. Thanks Melissa, now let’s head over to another part of 108 00:07:08.000 --> 00:07:12.000 campus, which will help us further prepare the spacecraft for launch. 109 00:07:12.000 --> 00:07:16.000 Narrator: Once a spacecraft component has been developed, it has to be cleared for launch 110 00:07:16.000 --> 00:07:20.000 in one of our clean rooms, which can range in size up to almost 37,000 cubic meters. 111 00:07:20.000 --> 00:07:24.000 All of this occurs in the Integration and Testing, or 112 00:07:24.000 --> 00:07:28.000 I&T Complex, which is comprised of four buildings, Goddard 113 00:07:28.000 --> 00:07:32.000 Environmental Test Engineering and Integration facility ensures every 114 00:07:32.000 --> 00:07:36.000 craft is space-ready by putting it through a series of high-stress tests. 115 00:07:36.000 --> 00:07:40.000 Built in 1989, the Space Craft Systems Development and 116 00:07:40.000 --> 00:07:44.000 Integration facility or SSDIF, is the largest cleanroom in North America. 117 00:07:44.000 --> 00:07:48.000 It has an entire wall of 1,600 air filters to help protect 118 00:07:48.000 --> 00:07:52.000 equipment from contaminants, that means the air gets recycled every 60 to 90 seconds. 119 00:07:52.000 --> 00:07:56.000 To tell us more about the cleanroom we’re here with Delaney Burkart, 120 00:07:56.000 --> 00:08:00.000 an integration engineer. The SSDIF cleanroom is like a 121 00:08:00.000 --> 00:08:04.000 surgeon’s operating room. It prevents dirt, dust, and other 122 00:08:04.000 --> 00:08:08.000 contaminants from damaging spacecraft components. The largest source 123 00:08:08.000 --> 00:08:12.000 of this contamination is us, the personnel working on those components. 124 00:08:12.000 --> 00:08:16.000 To enter the room, you first must pass through an air shower. 125 00:08:16.000 --> 00:08:20.000 Then wear a sterile body suit, head cover, boots, 126 00:08:20.000 --> 00:08:24.000 gloves, and face mask, which takes about ten minutes to put on. 127 00:08:24.000 --> 00:08:28.000 Unlike a speck of dirt on a camera, a speck on a telescope 128 00:08:28.000 --> 00:08:32.000 lens cannot be easily removed if the spacecraft is far away 129 00:08:32.000 --> 00:08:36.000 studying distant stellar objects. Once the spacecraft is built, we move on to 130 00:08:36.000 --> 00:08:40.000 testing. Getting is ready for spaceflight conditions. 131 00:08:40.000 --> 00:08:44.000 To make sure the spacecraft can withstand the sounds 132 00:08:44.000 --> 00:08:48.000 it might encounter during its flight. Scientists test the craft 133 00:08:48.000 --> 00:08:52.000 in a 13-meter tall acoustic testing chamber. We’re here with Test Engineer Yan Lui 134 00:08:52.000 --> 00:08:56.000 to tell us more about how the chamber works. In this chamber here, a scientist 135 00:08:56.000 --> 00:09:00.000 use altering flows of gaseous nitrogen to produce sounds 136 00:09:00.000 --> 00:09:04.000 as high as 150 decibels. In other words, 20 decibels 137 00:09:04.000 --> 00:09:08.000 louder than the roar of a jet engine. Using six foot speakers, 138 00:09:08.000 --> 00:09:12.000 the sounds blare in a two minute test to make sure instruments can withstand 139 00:09:12.000 --> 00:09:16.000 such noises. After the acoustics test we need to replicate the conditions 140 00:09:16.000 --> 00:09:20.000 the craft might encounter in space, which is right around the corner. 141 00:09:20.000 --> 00:09:24.000 The Space Environment Simulator, 142 00:09:24.000 --> 00:09:28.000 operational since 1962, is a thermal vacuum chamber 143 00:09:28.000 --> 00:09:32.000 designed to expose spacecraft components to spaceflight conditions. 144 00:09:32.000 --> 00:09:36.000 Well what do those conditions look like? We’re talking about an almost 145 00:09:36.000 --> 00:09:40.000 400 degree temperature range. From negative 233 degrees celsius to 146 00:09:40.000 --> 00:09:44.000 150 degrees celsius. The range 147 00:09:44.000 --> 00:09:48.000 is achieved by passing liquids through thermal shrouds for cold temperatures 148 00:09:48.000 --> 00:09:52.000 or using thermal lamps for high temperatures. Our simulator is roughly 149 00:09:52.000 --> 00:09:56.000 12 meters tall and 8 meters across. It operates with 150 00:09:56.000 --> 00:10:00.000 massive mechanical vacuum pumps, which are like huge versions of the vacuum 151 00:10:00.000 --> 00:10:04.000 cleaners people use at home. We have cryopumps to condense remaining gasses 152 00:10:04.000 --> 00:10:08.000 out of the chamber. The mechanical pumps and the cryopumps work together 153 00:10:08.000 --> 00:10:12.000 to eliminate almost all of the air in the chamber. You wouldn’t 154 00:10:12.000 --> 00:10:16.000 want to be inside while that is happening. It is just a billionth of 155 00:10:16.000 --> 00:10:20.000 Earth’s normal atmospheric pressure. It takes up to 12 hours 156 00:10:20.000 --> 00:10:24.000 to pump the chamber down to that pressure and 2 to 4 days to go 157 00:10:24.000 --> 00:10:28.000 back to room temperature. And we’re not done yet! Next the instruments 158 00:10:28.000 --> 00:10:32.000 gets tested in the high capacity centrifuge. Built in 159 00:10:32.000 --> 00:10:36.000 1965. this used to be an all-in-one machine. It’s not designed for astronauts 160 00:10:36.000 --> 00:10:40.000 however it used to be able to test environmental, vibration 161 00:10:40.000 --> 00:10:44.000 acoustic and G-force conditions. As our spacecraft grew in size 162 00:10:44.000 --> 00:10:48.000 it had to be modified. The centrifuge now only simulates the acceleration 163 00:10:48.000 --> 00:10:52.000 level of a rocket during the launch phase, typically about 10 G’s. 164 00:10:52.000 --> 00:10:56.000 This allows scientists to see how stress affects a craft’s structure 165 00:10:56.000 --> 00:11:00.000 and verify that it can withstand launch. It can rotate at 166 00:11:00.000 --> 00:11:04.000 155 miles per hour. our test limit is 30 G’s. 167 00:11:04.000 --> 00:11:08.000 or 30 times the gravity we have on Earth. The centrifuge draws 168 00:11:08.000 --> 00:11:12.000 one gigawatt of electricity, and when in use generates 169 00:11:12.000 --> 00:11:16.000 200 mile per hour winds. It’s been used for more than just spacecraft testing 170 00:11:16.000 --> 00:11:20.000 in 2002, NASA partnered with the NTSB 171 00:11:20.000 --> 00:11:24.000 to test SUVS and analyze the tipping point for manufactured models. 172 00:11:24.000 --> 00:11:28.000 Once a spacecraft has passed all testing phases, it’s go for launch. 173 00:11:28.000 --> 00:11:32.000 Narrator: For many Goddard launches 174 00:11:32.000 --> 00:11:36.000 we head to the beaches of Virginia. Wallops Flight Facility is NASA’s only 175 00:11:36.000 --> 00:11:40.000 owned and operated launch range for a variety of vehicles. 176 00:11:40.000 --> 00:11:44.000 including research aircraft, sounding rockets, scientific balloons, 177 00:11:44.000 --> 00:11:48.000 orbital vehicles, and unmanned aerial vehicles. 178 00:11:48.000 --> 00:11:52.000 It’s America’s oldest, continuously operating rocket range. With launches 179 00:11:52.000 --> 00:11:56.000 operations dating back to the summer of 1945. 180 00:11:56.000 --> 00:12:00.000 Wallops provides low-cost opportunities to conduce scientific experiments 181 00:12:00.000 --> 00:12:04.000 and for engineers to test their technologies ahead 182 00:12:04.000 --> 00:12:08.000 of their main missions. Many services support these tests, including 183 00:12:08.000 --> 00:12:12.000 integration and testing facilities, launchers and runways, as well as 184 00:12:12.000 --> 00:12:16.000 tracking and data services. Let's head to the launch viewing area 185 00:12:16.000 --> 00:12:20.000 where Sam Henry is going to tell us more about the launch cycle. There are many 186 00:12:20.000 --> 00:12:24.000 moving parts that go into a mission so everything can come together on launch day. 187 00:12:24.000 --> 00:12:28.000 Depending on the vehicle, technicians may arrive anywhere from 4 to 8 hours 188 00:12:28.000 --> 00:12:32.000 ahead of T minus zero, to begin testing on a vehicle and support system 189 00:12:32.000 --> 00:12:36.000 to make sure everything is ready, public safety is a top 190 00:12:36.000 --> 00:12:40.000 priority, so we launch our rockets over the ocean. Surveillance teams will 191 00:12:40.000 --> 00:12:44.000 monitor boat and air traffic before the rocket can take flight 192 00:12:44.000 --> 00:12:48.000 Weather also plays an important role on launch day. Meteorologists give weather updates 193 00:12:48.000 --> 00:12:52.000 from 72 hours until minutes just before launch. So teams 194 00:12:52.000 --> 00:12:56.000 can be as prepared as possible. Winds, severe weather, and cloud thickness 195 00:12:56.000 --> 00:13:00.000 are the biggest concerns on launch day. When conditions align, 196 00:13:00.000 --> 00:13:04.000 we are a go for launch and ready to safely conduct our range operations. 197 00:13:04.000 --> 00:13:08.000 I’ll head back to the control room where Courtney and I 198 00:13:08.000 --> 00:13:12.000 will tell you more about other Wallops missions and responsibilities. 199 00:13:12.000 --> 00:13:16.000 Wallops conducts research here on Earth, as well as in a near 200 00:13:16.000 --> 00:13:20.000 space environment, looking deep into the cosmos. Wallops manages 201 00:13:20.000 --> 00:13:24.000 NASA’s scientific balloon and sounding rockets program. 202 00:13:24.000 --> 00:13:28.000 Which are launched not only from the flight facility in Virginia, but from areas across the globe. 203 00:13:28.000 --> 00:13:32.000 As far North as Norway and as South as Antarctica. 204 00:13:32.000 --> 00:13:36.000 Sam: On average we fly 10 to 20 scientific balloon launches each year. 205 00:13:36.000 --> 00:13:40.000 These platforms allow researchers a chance to gather data with flights in the stratosphere 206 00:13:40.000 --> 00:13:44.000 a near space environment. Flights can run up to weeks at a time 207 00:13:44.000 --> 00:13:48.000 depending on science mission requirements. Sounding rockets are manufactured 208 00:13:48.000 --> 00:13:52.000 tested and launched from Wallops and remote locations 209 00:13:52.000 --> 00:13:56.000 many of these technology missions we support end up being integral to larger missions 210 00:13:56.000 --> 00:14:00.000 like Artemis. With around 20 missions a year, the sounding 211 00:14:00.000 --> 00:14:04.000 rocket program is one of Wallops’ most active platforms. 212 00:14:04.000 --> 00:14:08.000 We also open our facilities to industries for space and aeronautics research. 213 00:14:08.000 --> 00:14:12.000 In the past 25 years, we’ve collaborated with over 50 established 214 00:14:12.000 --> 00:14:16.000 and emerging aerospace companies. We also support other government 215 00:14:16.000 --> 00:14:20.000 agencies with their tests, missions, and training exercises. We look forward 216 00:14:20.000 --> 00:14:24.000 to partnering with these groups and others in coming years. As you can see 217 00:14:24.000 --> 00:14:28.000 Wallops provides a large range of options when it comes to testing equipment 218 00:14:28.000 --> 00:14:32.000 or conducting near-Earth research. And you can often watch 219 00:14:32.000 --> 00:14:36.000 their launches online and join in on the action! Once the vehicle 220 00:14:36.000 --> 00:14:40.000 has been launched, we jet back to Goddard to run communications with the craft. 221 00:14:40.000 --> 00:14:44.000 Narrator: When the craft is finally in space, how do we communicate with it? 222 00:14:44.000 --> 00:14:48.000 Goddard has over 60 years of communications and navigation support, going back 223 00:14:48.000 --> 00:14:52.000 to the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo eras. Goddard’s Near Space 224 00:14:52.000 --> 00:14:56.000 Network coordinates all space-to-ground communications for missions near Earth. 225 00:14:56.000 --> 00:15:00.000 The Near Space Network enables missions to send back significant amounts 226 00:15:00.000 --> 00:15:04.000 of data for investigation and discovery. These include missions like The Hubble Space Telescope 227 00:15:04.000 --> 00:15:08.000 and the International Space Station. In fact, the network plays 228 00:15:08.000 --> 00:15:12.000 a crucial role in NASA’s human space exploration effort 229 00:15:12.000 --> 00:15:16.000 It provides the International Space Station with constant communications, letting astronauts working and living 230 00:15:16.000 --> 00:15:20.000 there to always have a connection back home. We are here with 231 00:15:20.000 --> 00:15:24.000 Rosa Avalos-Warren, a human spaceflight mission manager to tell us 232 00:15:24.000 --> 00:15:28.000 more about the Near Space Network. Goddard’s Exploration and Space Communications 233 00:15:28.000 --> 00:15:32.000 division oversees the Near Space Network. The network blends commercial providers 234 00:15:32.000 --> 00:15:36.000 and government assets to support missions from Earth’s 235 00:15:36.000 --> 00:15:40.000 orbit up to two million kilometers away. These missions include 236 00:15:40.000 --> 00:15:44.000 launch vehicles, robotic and science satellites, technology demonstrations, 237 00:15:44.000 --> 00:15:48.000 and human spaceflight missions. To communicate with astronauts and spacecraft 238 00:15:48.000 --> 00:15:52.000 we download signals from satellites and translate them 239 00:15:52.000 --> 00:15:56.000 into recognizable data. This data ensures mission success for NASA 240 00:15:56.000 --> 00:16:00.000 The network is involved in a variety of missions, including NASA’s commercial crew 241 00:16:00.000 --> 00:16:04.000 program, which provides communications and navigation support to companies like Space-X 242 00:16:04.000 --> 00:16:08.000 and Boeing. As we go to the Moon as part of the Artemis program, the network will provide 243 00:16:08.000 --> 00:16:12.000 telemetry, command, and tracking support to the missions as they launch into space. 244 00:16:12.000 --> 00:16:16.000 In doing so we work alongside the Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Deep Space Network. 245 00:16:16.000 --> 00:16:20.000 We’re here with Brandon Bethune, the deputy project manager for the Near Space Network 246 00:16:20.000 --> 00:16:24.000 who will tell us more about some of the recent projects 247 00:16:24.000 --> 00:16:28.000 the scientists are working on. With missions like the Laser Communications Relay Demonstration 248 00:16:28.000 --> 00:16:32.000 and the Orion Artemis II Optical Communications System, 249 00:16:32.000 --> 00:16:36.000 we are infusing optical communications into our mission architectures. We are also 250 00:16:36.000 --> 00:16:40.000 advancing our radio frequency capabilities and integrating Ka-band 251 00:16:40.000 --> 00:16:44.000 capabilities into our network so missions can communicate more 252 00:16:44.000 --> 00:16:48.000 data, increasing our capacity for discovery. And that’s not all. 253 00:16:48.000 --> 00:16:52.000 We’re even implementing Delay/Disruption Tolerant Networking, which is a building block for NASA’s LunaNe 254 00:16:52.000 --> 00:16:56.000 a communications and navigation architecture at the Moon. 255 00:16:56.000 --> 00:17:00.000 Narrator: Our support to both human exploration and science investigation 256 00:17:00.000 --> 00:17:04.000 is always evolving and adapting to the needs of missions and empowering NASA’s vision. 257 00:17:04.000 --> 00:17:08.000 Thanks for joining us on this tour of Goddard 258 00:17:08.000 --> 00:17:12.000 Space Flight Center. We’ve seen the exhibits at the Visitor’s Center, explored the SAM lab, 259 00:17:12.000 --> 00:17:16.000 investigated how spacecraft are tested at the I&T Complex, 260 00:17:16.000 --> 00:17:20.000 launched a rocket at Wallops Flight Facility and coordinated communications at the 261 00:17:20.000 --> 00:17:24.000 Near Space Operation Control Center. We hope you enjoyed your tour 262 00:17:24.000 --> 00:17:28.000 of Goddard! If you want to learn more, you can visit our website or follow us on social media. 263 00:17:28.000 --> 00:17:32.000 We hope the rest of your day is out of this world! 264 00:17:32.000 --> 00:17:41.931 And keep looking up! [Music Fades Out]