NASA officials sound alarm over future of the Deep
Space Network
"I'm not sure who thought it was a good idea to put up
CubeSats with Artemis I."
STEPHEN CLARK - 8/30/2023, 11:12 AM
NASA has three
Deep Space Network stations in California, Spain, and
Australia, collectively tracking dozens of space missions.
NASA/Bill Ingall's
NASA officials sounded an alarm Tuesday about the agency's
Deep Space Network, a collection of antennas in California,
Spain, and Australia used to maintain contact with missions
scattered across the Solar System.
Everything from NASA's Artemis missions to the Moon to the
Voyager probes in interstellar space rely on the Deep Space
Network (DSN) to receive commands and transmit data back to
Earth. Suzanne Dodd, who oversees the DSN in her position at
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, likes to highlight the
network's importance by showing gorgeous images from
missions like the James Webb Space Telescope and the
Perseverance rover on Mars.
"All these images, and all these great visuals for the
public, and all the science for the scientists come down
through the Deep Space Network," Dodd said Tuesday in a
meeting of the NASA Advisory Council's Science Committee.
DSN is in deep sh!#
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