Houston, we are live from Outer Space!

The NYPD on Monday became the first law enforcement agency to ever host a conversation with the International Space Station.

The NYPD and NASA facilitated a live educational video call between Christina Koch and Nick Hogue –– two astronauts who are currently orbiting Earth –– and an audience of ambitious high school and college students at One Police Plaza.

“Today we’re not going to space but we are going to be talking to astronauts that are 250 miles above us, going 17,500 miles an hour,” said Police Commissioner O’Neill. “A little less than what I drive on the way to work in the morning.”

During the gitchy video call, the astronauts floated a microphone back-and-forth to one another as they answered dozens of questions from individually-selected students.

“It is a deeply emotional and moving experience when you see Earth from space. The perspective you get is impactful in a way that’s hard to explain,” Hogue said.

Students were eager to know the changes their bodies endure while in space and where the astronauts wanted to go next.

“Being in space is kind of like standing on your head,” Hogue said. “We’re studying right now what the changes are that it might cause. We’re part of an experiment where they’re looking at our eyes to see how that works.”

“I would go to Mars because that’s the next step. NASA is working to go so we can answer if life exists on other planets,” Koch said.

It was a nostalgic moment for many who reminisced when they watched the first moon landing.

“I remember where I was when we landed on the moon back in 1969,” the city’s Top Cop said. “We watched it on a twelve-inch black-and-white t.v.”

“37 years I’m on this job never thought I’d get to talk to an astronaut,” said Chief of Department Terence Monahan.