Premium Only Content

How NASA Uses Gravity and Radio Waves to Study Planets and Moon
The Deep Space Network, NASA’s international collection of giant radio antennas used to communicate with spacecraft at the Moon and beyond, helps scientists and engineers use gravity and radio science experiments to learn more about our planetary neighborhood.
After reaching a spacecraft reaches its destination, it uses radio antennas to communicate with the Deep Space Network, which in turn transmits radio signals back to the spacecraft. Every spacecraft travels in a predetermined path emitting radio signals as it orbits around its target. Scientists and engineers can infer the spacecraft's location and how fast it's going by measuring changes in the spacecraft's radio signal frequency. This is made possible by the Doppler effect, the same phenomenon that causes a siren to sound different as it travels towards and away from you.
The Doppler phenomenon is observed here when the spacecraft and the Deep Space Network antenna move in relation to each other. Differences between the frequency of radio signals sent by the spacecraft as it orbits and signals received on Earth give us details about the gravitational field of a planetary body. For example, if the gravity is slightly stronger, the spacecraft will accelerate slightly more. If gravity is slightly weaker, the spacecraft will accelerate slightly less. By developing a model of the planetary body's gravitational field, which can be mapped as a gravitational shape, scientists and researchers can deduce information about its internal structure.
The Deep Space Network was developed by and is managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Southern California. The antennas of the Deep Space Network are the indispensable link to robotic explorers venturing beyond Earth. They provide the crucial connection for commanding our spacecraft and receiving never-before-seen images and scientific information on Earth, propelling our understanding of the universe, our solar system and ultimately, our place within it.
JPL manages the Deep Space Network for the Space Communications and Navigation (SCaN) Program, based at NASA Headquarters within the Space Operations Mission Directorate.
-
1:27:18
Mike Rowe
2 days agoTheo Von Is Another Troubled White Boy | #449 | The Way I Heard It
100K34 -
3:50:41
FreshandFit
12 hours agoFresh&Fit Taking These Girls To Therapy
174K73 -
2:13:26
Badlands Media
14 hours agoDevolution Power Hour Ep. 390 - Political Warfare, Jimmy Kimmel & ANTIFA
101K31 -
2:43:56
TimcastIRL
9 hours agoJimmy Kimmel FIRED, ABC Pulls Show Over Charlie Kirk Assassination Comments | Timcast IRL
388K219 -
1:58:02
Barry Cunningham
10 hours agoJIMMY KIMMEL CANCELLED | OBAMA IS WHINING! | JD VANCE ON JESSE WATTERS!
116K133 -
2:34:46
TheSaltyCracker
9 hours agoWe Got Him Fired ReeEEStream 9-17-25
164K388 -
43:44
Man in America
11 hours agoAmericans Are About to Lose Everything—And They Don’t Even Know It
67.5K33 -
1:41:11
Adam Does Movies
2 days ago $4.50 earnedTalking Movies + Ask Me Anything - LIVE
49.7K2 -
3:40:08
I_Came_With_Fire_Podcast
18 hours agoNASA Blocks China, TPUSA BOOSTED, Chinese Spamoflauge, & Factional Division
47.5K6 -
33:40
Jamie Kennedy
10 hours agoEp 222 Processing the Loss of Charlie Kirk | HTBITY with Jamie Kennedy
66.4K28