NASA will launch the Laser Communications Relay Demonstration mission this summer

NASA has a new mission launching this summer called the Laser Communications Relay Demonstration (LCRD) meant to showcase the power of laser communications technologies. NASA says that with an increasing robotic and human presence in space, missions can benefit from new ways of communicating with the Earth. NASA has been using radio frequency communications since the 1950s to send data to and from space.

Laser technologies are planned for future missions to provide improved data capabilities. NASA intends to leverage laser communications because science instruments are evolving to capture high-definition data, including 4K video. With larger data files, missions need faster ways to transmit information back to Earth. Laser communications will allow for significantly accelerated data-transfer processes.

NASA says that using laser communications will enable 10 to 100 times more data to be transmitted back to Earth than current radiofrequency systems can support. Currently, it would take about nine weeks to transmit a complete map of Mars back to Earth using radio frequency systems. If NASA used laser communications to send the same data, it would take about nine days.

Laser communications will also help with the packaging of next-generation spacecraft as laser Communications Systems needed less volume, weigh less, and require less power. A smaller communications system means more room for science instruments on spacecraft or satellites. Infrared light is used by laser Communications Systems and can pack data into significantly tighter waves allowing ground stations to receive more data at once.

NASA notes that laser communications aren't necessarily faster, but they allow more data to be transmitted in a single downlink. LCRD will orbit about 22,000 miles above the Earth and will support missions in the near-Earth region. The first two years of the mission will test laser communications capabilities with experiments allowing NASA to refine laser technologies and increase knowledge about potential future applications.