REMARKS BY WILLIAM GERSTENMAIER, ASSOCIATE ADMINISTRATOR
FOR SPACE OPERATIONS, NASA HEADQUARTERS
Madrid Deep Space Communications Complex
July 8, 2009
Congratulations to everyone assembled here today – and those still hard at
work even as we speak, keeping the antennas operating – for 40 years of a
beautiful relationship.
The Madrid station performance has been outstanding – since its early days
supporting the Apollo missions to our recent return to the Moon on the LRO and
LCROSS spacecraft. The Madrid station, as part of NASA’s Deep Space Network, has
also supported NASA’s human spaceflight missions such as the Space Shuttle,
since the 1980’s. It’s also provided the comm for our deep space missions, such
as Galileo and Voyager. And you know Voyager is still going since its launch in
1977. Now that’s what I call long distance comm!
I particularly want to mention the excellent project management, engineering
and implementation provided by the INTA/INSA team for the Madrid commercial
power conversion and the commercial water development. It has made the complex
more reliable and environmentally friendly, which is important to all of us.
As you probably have heard by now, NASA’s plans for exploration of the Moon,
Mars and beyond are currently being studied by the U.S. Human Space Flight Plans
Committee – otherwise known as the Augustine Panel. They will be reporting to
the White House in August on their recommendations for the U.S. space
exploration program, and we are all looking forward to that.
The critical space communications architecture for NASA’s space exploration
program will be built on the backbone of the Madrid station and the rest of the
Deep Space Network.
Our vision is to build and maintain a scalable, integrated mission support
infrastructure that can readily evolve to accommodate new and changing
technologies, at the same time providing comprehensive, robust, cost effective,
and exponentially higher data rate space communications services to enable all
of NASA’s space missions.
This infrastructure shall provide the highest data rates technically feasible
and will assure that data comm protocols are internationally interoperable. We
will provide anytime-anywhere communication and navigation services for Lunar
and Martian human missions.
And while building this infrastructure of the future, we shall continue to
meet our commitments to provide space communications and navigation services to
existing missions – like the Hubble Space Telescope and the Mars Rovers – and
planned missions. This is like converting your 1960’s Mustang into a 2020 hot
rod while you are driving it 90 mph down the Autobahn. But we can do it. And the DSN will play a key role.
This station has always been a critical element in NASA’s Deep Space Network
and we will continue to depend on Spain for the superb operation of this crucial
space infrastructure.
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