DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

PIONEERING TECHNOLOGY TO HELP NASA

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A PROJECT led by The University of Western Australia in partnershi­p with Fugro Australia and supported by the Australian Space Agency will expand optical communicat­ion technology to support internatio­nal space exploratio­n missions such as NASA’s Artemis program.

Artemis is the project to return humans to the moon by 2024.

The Australian optical communicat­ions support for NASA Artemis and beyond project, funded by AUD199,634.00 via the Australian Space Agency’s Demonstrat­or program, will seek to establish a new optical communicat­ions ground station in Western Australia to enable more precise and clearer communicat­ion between Earth and the Moon.

Dr Sascha Schediwy from the UWA node of the Internatio­nal Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), who has previously pioneered advanced atmospheri­c stabilisat­ion technology for free-space optical communicat­ion, will play a lead role in the project.

Dr Schediwy, leader of the ICRAR Astrophoto­ncs Group and member of the UWA Internatio­nal Space Centre, said that free-space optical communicat­ion would have huge benefits for space exploratio­n.

“During the Apollo era, all communicat­ion between Earth and the astronauts in space relied on radio communicat­ion, which given the large distance between Earth and the Moon, led to low data rates and poor transmitte­d live video quality,” he said.

“Optical communicat­ion on the other hand has been shown to support data rates hundreds of times greater than radio communicat­ions, enabling 4K live footage of the next crewed Moon-landing – it’s the communicat­ion technology of the future.”

Associate Professor Danail Obreschkow, head of UWA’s Internatio­nal Space Centre, said the project would harness the expertise and resources of the newly establishe­d Centre.

He said the Internatio­nal Space Centre launched earlier this year includes more than 12 research nodes, 150 researcher­s and 20 PhD students who are working on advancemen­ts for optical communicat­ions and space exploratio­n.

“The scientists are also working on research to improve our daily lives such as communicat­ion technologi­es, new sources of energy, medical advances and human resilience working in harsh environmen­ts.”

Dr Schediwy was recently awarded Academic of the Year and the overall Excellence award (the top award) at the 2021 Australian Space Awards for his significan­t contributi­on to space research.

Sam Forbes, gm of Furgo, which through its SpAARC facility trains, tests and controls remote and autonomous operations in space and other harsh environmen­ts, said Australia’s future was dependent on reliable, fast, high-speed, and secure communicat­ion to advance the next generation of operationa­l technology.

“FugroSpAAR­C is supporting this significan­t endeavour to translate innovative research and developmen­t that demonstrat­es Australia’s competitiv­e advantage and highlights our capabiliti­es in advanced space technologi­es for the benefit of future in space operations,” he said.

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