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Laser Communications Relay Demonstration (LCRD)

NASA’s Laser Communications Relay Demonstration (LCRD) is conducting experiments to expand our knowledge and showcase the benefits of infrared light for missions transmitting terabytes of vital science data.

LCRD

Managed out of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, LCRD acts as an experiment platform for NASA, other government agencies, and commercial companies to refine laser, or optical, communications capabilities. Since its 2021 launch, LCRD has conducted over 2,600 experiment configurations with its two ground stations — testing adaptive optics, signal acquisition, atmospheric impact, and more. NASA’s SCaN (Space Communications and Navigation) Program continues to seek out new experiments with LCRD and other laser communications demonstrations.

More Laser Communications Demonstrations about LCRD

LCRD

Laser Communications Relay Demonstration

quick facts

Technology & Demonstrations

Flight and Ground Technologies

The LCRD project consists of highly sensitive NASA-developed data transmission components for relay satellites and mission ground stations receiving LCRD’s data.

Whether radio waves or infrared light, space missions encode their scientific data onto the electromagnetic signals to send back to Earth.

In space, LCRD’s optical modems translate digital data into laser signals, which are then transmitted via invisible beams of light by the relay’s optical modules. LCRD can both send and receive data from Earth and user spacecraft via two optical terminals, creating a continuous path for flowing mission data to-and-from space. While these are just some of the components that make up the LCRD payload, which all together is the size of a king mattress, these capabilities make LCRD NASA’s first two-way, end-to-end optical relay.

On Earth, the LCRD project developed ground station modems to translate encoded light back into data. Both stations leverage the power of adaptive optics to reduce the effects of atmospheric turbulence on the data. An adaptive optics system uses a sensor to measure the distortion to the electromagnetic signal that’s coming down from the spacecraft. If NASA can measure that distortion, then engineers can send it through a deformable mirror that changes its shape to take out those aberrations that the atmosphere induces. That allows the system to produce a pristine signal.

Rendering of LCRD Spacecraft
The LCRD Support Assembly Flight (LSAF) serves as the backbone for the LCRD components. Attached to the LSAF are the two optical modules, which generate the infrared lasers that transmit data to and from Earth. Other LCRD components, such as the modems that encode data into laser signals, are attached to the back of the LSAF.
NASA