Clearer Than Roaming Video Calls… A Look at the Live Broadcast from Lu…
U.S. President Donald Trump successfully held a live video communication on the 6th (local time) with the four crew members of Artemis II, who had just completed a close lunar flyby. This marks the first time in over half a century that a sitting U.S. president has spoken in real time with astronauts aboard a crewed spacecraft orbiting the Moon, 54 years after the last such mission.
The communication began around 10:30 p.m. Eastern Time and lasted approximately 12 minutes. President Trump remarked, “Today you made history and made America very proud.” The crew shared their observations of the Moon’s far side and described witnessing a space-based eclipse. Toward the end of the call, there was about a one-minute silence. When President Trump explained, “It’s probably due to a 9-second delay,” the mission control center responded with laughter.
The technology enabling this communication is NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory-operated Deep Space Network (DSN). The DSN is a global network consisting of three large parabolic antennas, each about 70 meters in diameter, located in Goldstone, California; near Madrid, Spain; and near Canberra, Australia. Positioned roughly 120 degrees apart around the Earth, these stations ensure that a spacecraft remains within the line of sight of at least one antenna despite Earth’s rotation.
The system uses three deep-space frequency bands: S-band (2 GHz), X-band (8 GHz), and Ka-band (32 GHz). Since GPS functions only near Earth, the DSN handles both navigation and communication in deep space beyond the Moon. By measuring the time it takes for signals to travel back and forth, it can determine a spacecraft’s position with meter-level precision even across billions of kilometers.
During the Apollo 11 landing in 1969, the DSN also received communications from Neil Armstrong. Compared to that time, the improved video quality of this broadcast is due to the transition from analog to digital signal processing and the addition of high-frequency bands such as Ka-band. Higher frequencies allow more data to be transmitted with the same antenna size, enabling high-definition video transmission. Unlike the black-and-white, low-resolution broadcasts of the Apollo era, this communication was streamed worldwide in high-definition color.
The Artemis II crew consists of Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency representative Jeremy Hansen. On the 6th, they reached a distance of 406,796 km from Earth—the farthest point ever reached by humans—surpassing records set during the Apollo era. Communication was lost for about 40 minutes while passing behind the Moon, and the crew is currently returning to Earth. Splashdown in the Pacific Ocean is scheduled for the 11th.







