NASA Schedules First Live HDTV Broadcast From Space

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Nov. 9, 2006

Allard Beutel 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-4769 

Lynnette Madison 
Johnson Space Center, Houston 
281-483-5111 

MEDIA ADVISORY: M06-176

NASA SCHEDULES FIRST LIVE HDTV BROADCAST FROM SPACE

Houston -- NASA makes history next week with the first live broadcasts 
from space in High Definition television (HDTV). NASA, in cooperation 
with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Discovery HD Theater and 
Japanese broadcast network NHK will produce the broadcasts on Nov. 
15.

Two live HDTV broadcasts will feature Expedition 14 Commander Michael 
Lopez-Alegria on the International Space Station, with Flight 
Engineer Thomas Reiter serving as camera operator aboard the 
220-mile-high laboratory. The broadcasts will be carried by Discovery 
HD Theater and NHK. Discovery HD Theater will carry the special 
broadcast live at 10:30 a.m. CST and will be shown at Discovery 
Channel stores.

"HDTV provides up to six times the resolution of regular analog 
video," said Rodney Grubbs, NASA principal investigator. "On previous 
missions, we've flown HDTV cameras but had to wait until after the 
mission to retrieve the tapes, watch the video and share it with the 
science and engineering community, the media and the public. For the 
first time ever, this test lets us stream live HDTV from space so the 
public can experience what its like to be there." 

Known as the Space Video Gateway, the system transmits high bandwidth 
digital television signals to the ground that are not only 
spectacular, but also valuable to scientists, engineers and managers.

NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, along with both NHK 
and Discovery, are cooperating in this effort though a Space Act 
Agreement originally signed in 2002.

The equipment to record and downlink HDTV signals was delivered to the 
station by the Space Shuttle Atlantis crew in September. It includes 
a commercially manufactured camcorder, viewfinder, lenses and power 
cables, an HDTV signal decoder, processor and hard drive, and power 
and data cables.

For more information about the International Space Station and the 
Expedition 14 crew, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/station 

	
-end-



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