I don’t have live access to current news right now. Here’s a quick summary of what “CAPCOM” and its relation to Capcom and NASA typically refer to, plus how to find the latest updates.
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What CAPCOM means: CAPCOM stands for Capsule Communicator, the NASA mission control role that serves as the primary voice to astronauts during missions. It’s historically filled by astronauts, though later shifts have included trained flight controllers as needed. This role is central to relaying information, flight status, and safety updates between crew and ground teams.[3][9]
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Capcom in space context: The term appears in NASA mission-control documentation and historical accounts of Apollo-era operations, illustrating how communication workflows were organized during missions. Modern discussions also reference CAPCOM as a model for efficient human-in-the-loop communication in spaceflight operations.[4][9][3]
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Related topics you might be seeing: There are various pages that discuss CAPCOM in mission control, space storytelling, and even modern uses of the term in media and education. Some sources trace the origin of the role to Mercury/Apollo-era programs and note its ongoing influence on how space agencies structure comms.[9]
How to find the latest news quickly
- Search: “CAPCOM NASA latest news” or “CAPCOM mission control 2026” to pull current articles and NASA announcements.
- Check NASA’s official newsroom and mission pages for announcements about control room operations or mission communications.
- Look for reputable space news outlets (e.g., NASA, SpaceNews, Space.com) with filter for the date to ensure updates are current.
If you’d like, I can perform a focused, up-to-date search and summarize the most recent items with direct quotes and links.
Sources
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www.odu.edumonitoring and advising nearly every step in deploying equipment, navigating, scheduling, regulating life support, logging data, and interpreting observations. With a bare 1.25 second delay, conversations were always possible, but sometimes confused because CapCom was managing two astronauts who tended to work independently. The rover’s video was controlled by another person in mission control and generally allowed … and work management functions as the EVA crew interacts with CapCom...
ntrs.nasa.govSpace Administration CAPCOM AND MISSION CONTROL CENTER When it comes to day-to-day activities on the space laboratory, the astronauts and cosmonauts communicate constantly with teams of scientists and engineers in the Mission Control Center. They work together to make sure experiments are performed correctly and even provide video conference links between the crew members and their families on Earth. Sometimes, classrooms across America
www.nasa.govCapcom Capcom is a term that originated in the days of the Mercury space program when spacecraft were little more than capsules . Originally named for "capsule communicator," the capcom position is traditionally a U.S. astronaut or a member of the U.S.
www.encyclopedia.comJoin Capcom in uniting professionals who shape public understanding of space through diverse media. We focus on film, journalism, and digital space storytelling to transmit the future of space narratives.
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