NASA has updated its policy to permit astronauts to take personal smartphones on missions to the International Space Station and beyond. This change aims to enable crews to capture and share personal moments more easily. The decision was announced by NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman.
For decades, astronauts heading to the International Space Station, located about 250 miles above Earth, have had to leave their personal smartphones behind. This restriction has now been lifted, marking a practical shift in how crews document their experiences in space.
In a recent post on X, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman revealed that astronauts on the Crew-12 mission and the upcoming Artemis II flight will be able to carry their own devices. "We are giving our crews the tools to capture special moments for their families and share inspiring images and video with the world," Isaacman stated. This policy update prioritizes accessibility over the bulkier Nikon DSLRs that crews previously relied on for high-quality photography, potentially leading to more spontaneous and relatable content from orbit.
While this won't be the first instance of smartphone imagery from space—achieved earlier by a set of three miniature phone-based satellites launched in 2013, which outperformed the preceding British STRaND-1 experiment—it promises novel perspectives. The Artemis II mission, tentatively scheduled for March, represents NASA's first crewed lunar voyage since Apollo 17 in 1972. For the first time, smartphone-captured images could emerge directly from lunar orbit, offering the public unprecedented glimpses of deep space travel through familiar technology.
This adjustment reflects broader efforts to humanize space exploration, bridging the gap between astronauts and those on Earth by facilitating real-time sharing of their extraordinary environment.