Nokia to build 4G network on the moon for NASA

The agency's new Artemis programme aims to establish a sustainable human presence on the moon within the next decade.

The Earth rises above the Moon's horizon, the lunar terrain is in the area of Mare Smythii (Smyth's Sea) on the nearside, in an image taken by Apollo 11, July 1969. Coordinates of the centre of the terrain here are 86 degrees east longitude and 3 degrees north latitude. (Photo by Space Frontiers/Archive Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Image: Nokia says the kit will be built to withstand 'the harsh conditions of the launch and lunar landing'
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NASA has chosen Nokia to build a 4G network on the moon as part of the space agency's Artemis programme, which aims to establish a sustainable human presence there.

The Finnish company will build the technology which will be integrated into NASA's lunar landers and used for remote control, as well as streaming high-definition videos.

The Artemis programme, named after the mythological sister of Apollo, the first moon mission's namesake, aims to take the first woman and the next man taken to the lunar surface by 2024.

BOCHUM, GERMANY - FEBRUARY 10: The logo of the Nokia plant is pictured on February 10, 2008 in Bochum Germany. Mobile telephone giant Nokia plans to close it's factory in Bochum laying off approx. 2,300 employees citing rising labor costs. (Photo by Jens Koch/Getty Images)
Image: The Finnish company has adapted designs from its work on Earth

SpaceX and Blue Origin have been given the nod to develop the new lunar landers which will take the astronauts to the surface of the moon from orbit.

The private spaceflight companies, owned by Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos, will develop competing systems in parallel, alongside a third company called Dynetics, but NASA will eventually choose one.

NASA intends to establish a "Lunar Gateway" outpost which will be orbiting the moon by the mid 2020s, and then lunar landers to deliver cargo to the surface by the late 2020s.

Nokia said its technology would be used to provide connectivity for "any activity that astronauts need to carry out", from "voice and video communications capabilities" through to the "deployment and control of robotic and sensor payloads".

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The company's chief technology officer, Marcus Weldon, said: "We are now building the first ever cellular communications network on the moon.

"Reliable, resilient and high-capacity communications networks will be key to supporting sustainable human presence on the lunar surface," Mr Weldon added.

Nokia's lunar network is a little different from what it uses on Earth, primarily because the kit itself needs to be able to "withstand the harsh conditions of the launch and lunar landing, and to operate in the extreme conditions of space".

But, other than that, it will be normal 4G, including a base station, radio antennas, and user equipment - although it isn't clear how different this equipment is going to be from normal smartphones.