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List of antennas in NASA's Deep Space Network

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The NASA Deep Space Network is located on three continents—Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex (GDSCC), Canberra Deep Space Communications Complex (CDSCC), and Madrid Deep Space Communications Complex (MDSCC)—and has multiple antennas to provide continuous support for both robotic space probes and crewed missions.

Naming and types

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All deep space stations (DSSs) at the GDSCC site are designated with numbers in the teens and twenties: (i.e. DSS-13 and DSS-24); at the CDSCC with numbers in the thirties and forties (i.e. DSS-34 and DSS-43), and at the MDSCC with numbers in the fifties and sixties (i.e. DSS-54 and DSS-65).[1]

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70m antenna

Antennas can be divided into several subnetworks by type:[1][2]

  1. The three 70 m DSSs (DSS-14, DSS-43, DSS-63) were originally built as 64 m diameter Cassegrain antennas, designed like Parkes Observatory's antenna.[2][3] The first, DSS-14 began operation in 1966. All three were expanded to 70 m diameter from 1982 to 1988 to increase their sensitivity to support Voyager 2's encounter with Neptune. The 70 m DSSs are used for deep-space mission support, radio astronomy, and very-long-baseline interferometry. The DSS-14 is also used for radar astronomy as Goldstone Solar System Radar. Canberra's 70 m dish, DSS-63, is the only antenna that can communicate with Voyager 2 because of its south-celestial-hemisphere trajectory.[4] The 70 m antennas support both X-band and S-band uplink and downlink.
  2. The 34 m HEF Subnet (high-efficiency) (DSS-15, DSS-45, DSS-65) was installed to replace the older 34 m Standard, STD, subnet. The 34 m STD subnet DSSs had a polar-axis, or HA-DEC, design and were originally built with 26 m diameter reflectors and later upgraded to 34 m. The 34 m HEF subnet DSSs support X-band uplink and downlink, and S-band downlink. As of 2017, the 34 m antennas are being decommissioned.
  3. The 34 m BWG Subnet (beam waveguide antenna) (DSS-24, DSS-25, DSS-26, DSS-34, DSS-54) can be recognized by the hole in the middle of their main reflectors where on other DSSs there is a feed cone that houses microwave equipment. BWG antennas have five precision radio frequency mirrors that reflect radio signals along a tube from the antenna to a below-ground room.[5] The 34 m BWG subnet DSSs generally support both X-band and S-band uplink and downlink, though some antennas at GDSCC also have Ka-band uplink and downlink capability.[1]
  4. The 26 m Subnet (DSS-16, DSS-46, DSS-66) was used for rapidly tracking Earth-orbiting spacecraft. They were originally built to support the Apollo lunar missions between 1967 and 1972. The 26 m subnet DSSs support S-band uplink and downlink. All 26 m antennas were decommissioned in 2009.[5]
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Antenna arraying

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View from the Earth's north pole, showing the field of view of the main DSN antenna locations. Once a mission gets more than 30,000 km (19,000 mi) from Earth, it is al­ways in view of at least one of the stations.

The antennas can combine signals and be used simultaneously to improve reception of weak signal. Arraying four 34 m antennas can provide the equivalent of one 70 m dish. As many as eight antennas can be arrayed at once.[1][6]

NASA first used antenna arraying in the 1970s, experimenting with it for Voyager encounters at Jupiter and the Pioneer 11 encounter with Saturn. After early experiments, all three DSN complexes intensively used arraying for the Voyager encounters with Saturn in 1980 and 1981. By the time Voyager 2 flew by Uranus in 1986, the DSN was combining signals from up to four antennas. For the spacecraft’s Neptune encounter three years later, the DSN combined signals from Australia’s Parkes Radio Telescope into the Canberra complex, and combined signals from the 27 antennas of the Very Large Array in New Mexico into the Goldstone array.[5]

NASA used arraying for the Galileo mission to Jupiter in 1996 and 1997. Galileo had a problem with its high-gain antenna, and the DSN arrayed up to five antennas from three tracking facilities (Goldstone, Canberra and Parkes) to increase the data return rate, resulting in increase by a factor of three, compared to that of a single 70-meter antenna.[5]

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Canberra Deep Space Communications Complex (CDSCC)

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Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex (GDSCC)

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Madrid Deep Space Communications Complex (MDSCC)

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References

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