NASA have been getting radio and laser messages from profound space.
Throughout the course of recent months, the US space organization have been utilizing its Mind rocket to test another correspondence framework.
The test's primary goal is to visit a space rock of a similar name, yet has been sending laser messages back to Earth meanwhile.
This is being finished through Profound Space Optical Correspondences, which a close infrared laser sends messages back to Earth.
It was first tried in November when a laser signal was distinguished from 10 million miles away.
Among the messages sent was a feline video - in light of the fact that who doesn't cherish a feline video?
The upside of DSOC over radio is that better transmission capacity speeds imply that information can be gotten faster.
Yet, because of a few innovative difficulties, NASA specialists are thinking about a mix of radio and laser to be the most ideal choice.
The most recent test got information from two times similar to the past test, from 32 million kilometers (20 million miles).
On January 1, they downloaded an image of the Mind group at a pace of 15.63 megabits each second - multiple times quicker than standard radio recurrence.
In a proclamation, Amy Smith, NASA'S Profound Space Organization Delegate director at the Fly Impetus Research facility, said: "Our half and half radio wire has had the option to effectively and dependably lock onto and track the DSOC downlink since soon after the tech demo sent off.
"It additionally accepted Mind's radio recurrence signal, so we have shown simultaneous radio and optical recurrence profound space correspondences interestingly."
A little gadget comprised of seven hexagonal mirror was fitted onto the current radio wire.
"It's a high-resistance optical framework based on a 34-meter [112-foot] adaptable design," said Barzia Tehrani, correspondences ground frameworks delegate supervisor and conveyance chief for the cross breed radio wire at JPL.
"We utilize an arrangement of mirrors, exact sensors, and cameras to effectively adjust and coordinate laser from profound space into a fiber arriving at the locator."
The expectation is that NASA will actually want to follow Mind when it is 2.5 times the distance Earth is from the Sun.
"For a really long time, we have been adding new radio frequencies to the DSN's goliath recieving wires situated all over the planet, so the most plausible following stage is to incorporate optical frequencies," said Tehrani.
"We can have one resource completing two things simultaneously; changing over our correspondence streets into expressways and saving time, cash, and assets."