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SmallSat News

You are here: Home / 2023 / Archives for April 2023

Archives for April 2023

Millennium Space Systems’ Tetra-1 is mission ready

April 14, 2023 by editorial

Since launching Tetra-1 on November 1, 2022, Millennium Space Systems, a Boeing (NYSE: BA) company partnered with the U.S. Space Force’s Space Systems Command (SSC), successfully deployed the vehicle from its host, initialized all components and subsystems and performed systems check out. Tetra-1 is healthy and ready for mission operations.

SSC is now assuming full spacecraft operations, using the procedures developed jointly with Millennium Space Systems.

Millennium Space Systems delivered the spacecraft and ground software to SSC to operate independently, and provided a different type of training, simulation and confidence-building for operators to understand the nuances of a smallsat. This training experience, new tools and space-qualified spacecraft components support Millennium Space Systems’ ability to deliver smallsats for high-stakes critical missions for National Security Space.

“We developed new operations tools to ease the planning for actions like station changes and planning and executing on-orbit maneuvering. This is particularly important for super GEO, where if you’re not mission capable, you’re considered in the graveyard.” (Super GEO is new ground for smallsats, with known and unknown challenges operating so far away – about 38,000 km from Earth.) When Guardians work on Tetra-1, they’ll learn new ways of doing things that were previously done on much larger satellites. Because Tetra-1 is smaller, more agile and maneuverable, you have different options. It’s like the difference between maneuvering a speed boat versus a cruise ship. The experience Tetra-1 provides is critical to space operators understanding how to manage a small satellite. An example is operating during eclipse season. Actions for what you want the satellite to do are taken more deliberately because it has a smaller power system. And operators must manage consumables differently compared to a larger satellite, all of which requires training beyond just having classroom knowledge – it takes hands-on experience. — Mike Todaro, vice president of Mission Operations & Integration at Millennium Space Systems

“Tetra-1 has helped us learn about small satellites’ potential to operate in super GEO. Due to Tetra-1’s maneuverability, it has enabled us to experiment and train with various tactics, techniques, and procedures. Thus, allowing our program office and operators to identify what roles small satellites can potentially play in future USSF Missions. Furthermore, Tetra-1’s robustness permitted SSC to work with Space Delta 11 in Space Training and Readiness Command and perform maneuvers dedicated solely to a live on orbit training campaign, known as ‘Scarlet Star.’” — Captain JeanCarlo Vasquez, Tetra-1 deputy program manager at SSC

Filed Under: News

UPDATE 4: The SpaceX Transporter 7 launch has been placed on hold… crummy weather is responsible for the launch abort

April 14, 2023 by editorial

The launch director for the Transporter-7 launch called a ‘hold’ on this mission at T-00:28 seconds due to weather constraints. Another attempt to launch this mission will occur on 4/14/23 at 11:47 p.m.

SpaceX is now targeting no earlier than Thursday, April 13th., at 11:47 p.m. PT (06:47 UTC on April 14) for Falcon 9’s launch of the Transporter-7 mission to LEO from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.

Vandenberg SFB’s SLC-4E, photo courtesy of SpaceX

The first stage booster supporting this mission previously launched Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich, DART, and seven Starlink missions.

Following stage separation, Falcon 9 will land on Landing Zone 4 (LZ-4) at Vandenberg Space Force Base.

Transporter-7 is SpaceX’s seventh, dedicated, smallsat rideshare mission. There will be 51 payloads on this flight, including CubeSats, MicroSats, hosted payloads, and orbital transfer vehicles carrying spacecraft that will be deployed at a later time.

A live webcast of this mission will start about 10 minutes prior to liftoff.

Possible payload list for the Transporter 7 mission… there are also two unspecified smallsats within this payload, as well…

Aarhus University, Denmark
DISCO-1 (1U)

Aerospace Corporation
LLITED A/B (2x 1.5U)

Alba Orbital
Cluster 7

ARCA, Italy
REVELA (3U)
SMPOD03 (hosted payload — 3U deployer)

AstroForge
Brokkr-1 (6U)

D-Orbit
ION

Exolaunch (21 satellites, 16 cubesat, 5 microsat)
Bronco Space (at Cal Poly Pomona)
GomSpace
FACSAT-2 (Colombian Air Force-(6U, Colombian Air Force, GomSpace bus)
EnduroSat
TAIFA-1 (3U, SayariLabs [Kenya]
Sateliot-0
(Platform-3)
ISILAUNCH
on behalf of Orbital Solutions Monaco (OSM) + Laboratoire
Athmosphères

Kenya Space Agency with SayariLabs + EnduroSat
NanoAvionics
DEWA SAT-2 (6U, DEWA, UAE)
Observations Spatiales (LATMOS)
Plan-S
Connecta T2.1 (6U)
SSS-2B

Spire Global
Space Flight Laboratory
NORSAT-TD (~40kg, Space Flight Laboratory for Norwegian Space Agency)
Stanford Student Space Initiative
Sapling-2
TÜBİTAK UZAY
IMECE (800 kg., TÜBİTAK UZAY, Turkey)
Unseenlabs
BRO-9 (6U)

GHGSat
GHGSat-C6/C7/C8 (3x 15k g.)

Hawkeye 360
Cluster 7 (3x 33 kg.)

InspireSat 7
(2U, Latmos)

ISILaunch
IRIS-C (3U, NCKU, Taiwan)

Istanbul
(1P, Hello Space)

Kepler Space
Kepler (2x 6U)

KILICSAT
(3U, Turkey)

LEMUR-2
ONREFLECTION
ROMEO-N-LEO
SPACEGUS

Maverick

Momentus
Vigoride VR-6

Orbital Sidekick
GHOSt (2x microsat)

Orbital Solutions Monaco
RoseyCubesat-1 (1U, ISIS platform)

RomSpace, Romania
ROM-2 (1P)

Satellogic
NewSat 36-39 (4x microsat)

Solar Array
(hosted payload)

Spire Global
(2x 6U for customers, 1x 3U)

Technical University of Budapest, Hungary
MRC-100 (3P)

Tomorrow.io
Tomorrow-R1 (85 kg)

Umbra
Umbra-06

University of Colorado Denver
CIRBE (3U, CU Boulder/LASP)

VIREO
(3U, C3S, Hungary)

Two undisclosed smallsats

Filed Under: News

Blue Canyon Technologies receives JPL smallsats build award

April 14, 2023 by editorial

Blue Canyon Technologies, a Raytheon Technologies (NYSE: RTX) subsidiary, will design and manufacture three smallsats to support NASA’s Investigation of Convective Updrafts, or INCUS, mission. The principal investigator is Susan van den Heever of Colorado State University.

The INCUS mission — led by Colorado State University and managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory – aims to better understand the complex dynamics of thunderstorms and their impact on Earth’s climate and weather models.

Blue Canyon’s smallsats will fly in tandem coordination, each displaying a dynamic atmospheric radar and dynamic microwave radiometer measuring the atmospheric conditions of Earth.

Blue Canyon’s work will be performed at the firm’s Crescent Constellation Factory located in Lafayette, Colorado.

“BCT’s successful science exploration programs and our experience controlling large flexible structures will be key to supporting this critical science mission.” — Jeff Schrader, President, Blue Canyon Technologies.

INCUS overview video

Filed Under: Featured, News

General Atomics now tests simulated space environments inhouse with commissioning of Thermal Vacuum Chamber

April 14, 2023 by editorial

General Atomics Electromagnetic Systems (GA-EMS) announced today that Thermal Vacuum Chamber commissioning has been completed at the company’s Centennial, Colorado, space system development facilities. The commissioning completes GA-EMS’ process of bringing in-house the capability to perform testing under simulated space environmental conditions, and supports testing and qualification of components, subassemblies, payloads, and integrated spacecraft up to ESPA-Grande class satellites.

GA-EMS offers complete “end-to-end” solutions supporting complex missions and single satellite to constellation-sized requirements. From satellite design, prototype, manufacture, and test, to payload integration, launch coordination, and on-orbit mission control services, GA-EMS is helping customers rapidly and efficiently access the possibilities of space.

“The thermal vacuum chambers add yet another key component to our expanding space capabilities portfolio, allowing us to improve efficiencies and seamlessly transition spacecraft from production to environmental testing without the spacecraft ever having to leave our clean rooms or facilities,” said Scott Forney, president of GA-EMS. “The ability to test components, payloads and spacecraft in a controlled, simulated space environment is essential to evaluating their performance and ability to withstand the rigors of space, and address any issues that may arise prior to flight.”

“Having three fully commissioned thermal vacuum chambers in-house translates into tangible benefits for our customers, helping reduce program risks and added costs associated with transporting satellites to and from third party testing facilities. With a range of chambers readily available, our assembly, integration and test teams can complete component and system environmental testing and process the results in real-time and with greater efficiency,” said Gregg Burgess, vice president of GA-EMS Space Systems. 

For satellites ranging from sub-U to 500kg ESPA-Grande class, GA-EMS offers broad expertise and experience in the design, manufacture, integration, and test of satellites and space systems. The three thermal vacuum chambers add to the company’s expanding space portfolio of design to on-orbit solutions to meet the mission requirements and growing needs of the military, intelligence community, civil and commercial satellite communities.

Filed Under: News

Slingshot Aerospace expands their commercial optical tracking system for LEO satellites

April 13, 2023 by editorial

Slingshot Aerospace has significantly expanded their Slingshot Global Sensor Network‘s LEO tracking capabilities to make its network the largest, commercial, optical sensor network for LEO observation in the world – providing first-of-its-kind optical tracking of LEO objects at scale.

By the end of 2023, Slingshot plans to deploy more than 80 new optical sensors, which include proprietary telescopes and ultra-wide field of view sensors, bringing the total network to more than 200 sensors across more than 20 sites globally.

The expansion will include two new Southern Hemisphere sites, with additional sensors being added to many of the existing sites around the world. The expansion to the network will increase Slingshot’s daily LEO observations by 100x, resulting in more than one million observations per day.

Slingshot’s Global Sensor Network generates precise angular and brightness data that provides additional context beyond existing LEO radar tracking capabilities. Angular data enables enhanced orbital state generation (how the object is moving), while brightness data enables object characterization and change detection.

The Slingshot Global Sensor Network leverages proprietary sensors with daytime LEO tracking capabilities that allow for 5x the observation opportunities of night-only systems. This increased observation window provides customers with more frequent observations of their satellites and objects of interest. The expansion also adds additional redundancy to the network that further mitigates any intermittent weather outages which are historically associated with smaller electro-optical observation networks.

The rapid pace of LEO constellation deployment is creating an urgent need for more regular object tracking and characterization of objects in LEO. Slingshot’s global network of sensors will dramatically improve observation frequency – accelerating revisit rates and providing more persistent optical tracking of the more than 6,500 active satellites in LEO today.

The Global Sensor Network powers Slingshot Vantage, the world’s first and only day and night LEO-to-GEO optical satellite tracking and monitoring service. The service enables government and commercial customers around the world to enhance their space situational awareness with best-in-class observations, orbital analytics, and event detection.

In addition to enhancing the quality of Slingshot’s Vantage services, the data collected via the Global Sensor Network will feed Slingshot Digital Space Twin™.

The digital space twin serves as the intelligence core that powers Slingshot’s products, including Slingshot Beacon, the industry’s first two-sided coordination and data-sharing solution for satellite collision avoidance.

“Slingshot’s enhanced space situational awareness data is already trusted by government organizations and satellite operators worldwide, and this expansion will allow us to significantly increase industry-leading LEO tracking data for satellite operators around the globe. We are making Slingshot’s Global Sensor Network the go-to commercial space surveillance and tracking provider for all orbital regimes. This expansion introduces an unprecedented level of space situational awareness that gives operators the critical insights they need for successful space operations.” — Melanie Stricklan, Co-founder and CEO, Slingshot Aerospace

Slingshot has also recently announced an expansion of its executive team with two key executive appointments. Leslie Hildebrand, a former executive at Lockheed Martin, has been appointed to the role of Senior Vice President of Government Business Development and Strategy. Hildebrand brings more than 23 years of experience in senior strategic business development roles to her new position. Pieter Kreuk has been named Chief Financial Officer, bringing more than a decade of financial leadership experience with senior positions at Ernst & Young and other companies.

Filed Under: News

GA-ASI flies MQ-20 Avenger autonomously using LEO SATCOM datalink

April 13, 2023 by editorial

On April 6, 2023, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI) conducted live, tactical, air combat maneuvers using Artificial Intelligence (AI) pilots to control a company-owned MQ-20 Avenger® Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS).

Collaborative maneuvers between human and AI pilots were conducted using GA-ASI’s Live, Virtual, Constructive (LVC) collaborative combat aircraft (CCA) ecosystem over LEO SATCOM provider’s IP-based Mission Beyond Line of Sight (BLOS) datalink. The LEO SATCOM connection was also used to rapidly retrain and redeploy AI pilots while the aircraft was airborne, demonstrating GA-ASI’s ability to update AI pilots within minutes.

GA-ASI’s Integrated Intelligence Center (iic) for
Multi-domain, Multi-INT ISR Mission Planning, Command & Control, and Exploitation

This marks the first deployment of a LEO SATCOM provider connections running on an operationally relevant unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) platform. The team used two L3Harris Technologies RASOR Multi-Functional Processors (MFPs) – one that housed the transceiver card and another that controlled the BLOS Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA).

The test aircraft was outfitted with a Ball Aerospace BLOS AESA system, capable of full duplex operation. The demonstration highlighted GA-ASI’s commitment to operationalizing CCA by fusing innovative future warfare technologies, such as GA-ASI’s AI pilots and LVC ecosystem, and L3Harris and Ball Aerospace BLOS datalink solutions.

GA-ASI leveraged its end-to-end CCA ecosystem for the flight that fused third-party capabilities, human-on-the-loop control, and autonomy to enable effective human-machine teaming for 21st century conflicts. Operator commands were captured via hands on throttle-and-stick (HOTAS) controls and were sent via LEO SATCOM to AI pilots running Reinforcement Learning (RL) algorithms.

AI pilots autonomously tracked and maneuvered around dynamically, and updated entities specified via HOTAS. Operators were provided updates from AI pilots on a cockpit heads-up display and could dynamically re-task via HOTAS as the mission evolved. In addition, data from agent performance was collected and sent to the ground where agents were retrained to improve performance, and then redeployed via LEO SATCOM in a matter of minutes.

This is another in an ongoing series of technology insertion and autonomous flights performed using internal research and development funding to prove out important concepts for UAS.

“The flight demonstrated GA-ASI’s unmatched ability to fly autonomy on real, tactically relevant, unmanned combat aerial vehicles. It displayed effective BLOS Command and Control through the collaboration between three defense primes. This showcases our rapidly maturing CCA mission system suite and moves us one step closer to providing this revolutionary capability to the warfighter.” — GA-ASI Senior Director of Advanced Programs, Michael Atwood

Filed Under: News

GomSpace receives 845 k euros order from Argotec

April 13, 2023 by editorial

Argotec has placed an order with GomSpace for power systems at a value of 845,000 euros to be delivered over the coming 12 months, to be completed by Q1 of 2024.

GomSpace NanoPower P80 unit

“We are happy that GomSpace technologies and expertise in power systems are recognized by a company like Argotec. NanoPower P80 and BP8 are our latest releases of power systems building our track record in managing on-orbit energy. NanoPower product series can be used in a multitude of configurations, which allows our customers to benefit from product reliability strategy, while building specific use cases.” — Carsten Drachmann, CEO, GomSpace.

Filed Under: Featured, News

UPDATE 3: SpaceX has now moved the Transporter 7 launch with 51 payloads to April 13th — see the payload listings…

April 12, 2023 by editorial

SpaceX is now targeting no earlier than Thursday, April 13th., at 11:47 p.m. PT (06:47 UTC on April 14) for Falcon 9’s launch of the Transporter-7 mission to LEO from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.

Vandenberg SFB’s SLC-4E, photo courtesy of SpaceX

The first stage booster supporting this mission previously launched Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich, DART, and seven Starlink missions.

Following stage separation, Falcon 9 will land on Landing Zone 4 (LZ-4) at Vandenberg Space Force Base.

Transporter-7 is SpaceX’s seventh, dedicated, smallsat rideshare mission. There will be 51 payloads on this flight, including CubeSats, MicroSats, hosted payloads, and orbital transfer vehicles carrying spacecraft that will be deployed at a later time.

A live webcast of this mission will start about 10 minutes prior to liftoff.

Possible payload list for the Transporter 7 mission… there are also two unspecified smallsats within this payload, as well…

Aarhus University, Denmark
DISCO-1 (1U)

Aerospace Corporation
LLITED A/B (2x 1.5U)

Alba Orbital
Cluster 7

ARCA, Italy
REVELA (3U)
SMPOD03 (hosted payload — 3U deployer)

AstroForge
Brokkr-1 (6U)

D-Orbit
ION

Exolaunch (21 satellites, 16 cubesat, 5 microsat)
Bronco Space (at Cal Poly Pomona)
GomSpace
FACSAT-2 (Colombian Air Force-(6U, Colombian Air Force, GomSpace bus)
EnduroSat
TAIFA-1 (3U, SayariLabs [Kenya]
Sateliot-0
(Platform-3)
ISILAUNCH
on behalf of Orbital Solutions Monaco (OSM) + Laboratoire
Athmosphères

Kenya Space Agency with SayariLabs + EnduroSat
NanoAvionics
DEWA SAT-2 (6U, DEWA, UAE)
Observations Spatiales (LATMOS)
Plan-S
Connecta T2.1 (6U)
SSS-2B

Spire Global
Space Flight Laboratory
NORSAT-TD (~40kg, Space Flight Laboratory for Norwegian Space Agency)
Stanford Student Space Initiative
Sapling-2
TÜBİTAK UZAY
IMECE (800 kg., TÜBİTAK UZAY, Turkey)
Unseenlabs
BRO-9 (6U)

GHGSat
GHGSat-C6/C7/C8 (3x 15k g.)

Hawkeye 360
Cluster 7 (3x 33 kg.)

InspireSat 7
(2U, Latmos)

ISILaunch
IRIS-C (3U, NCKU, Taiwan)

Istanbul
(1P, Hello Space)

Kepler Space
Kepler (2x 6U)

KILICSAT
(3U, Turkey)

LEMUR-2
ONREFLECTION
ROMEO-N-LEO
SPACEGUS

Maverick

Momentus
Vigoride VR-6

Orbital Sidekick
GHOSt (2x microsat)

Orbital Solutions Monaco
RoseyCubesat-1 (1U, ISIS platform)

RomSpace, Romania
ROM-2 (1P)

Satellogic
NewSat 36-39 (4x microsat)

Solar Array
(hosted payload)

Spire Global
(2x 6U for customers, 1x 3U)

Technical University of Budapest, Hungary
MRC-100 (3P)

Tomorrow.io
Tomorrow-R1 (85 kg)

Umbra
Umbra-06

University of Colorado Denver
CIRBE (3U, CU Boulder/LASP)

VIREO
(3U, C3S, Hungary)

Two undisclosed smallsats

Filed Under: News

UPDATE 1: SpaceX scheduled to move 51 payloads from VSFB via Falcon 9 on April 11th — possible payload listings now included…

April 11, 2023 by editorial

SpaceX is targeting no earlier than Tuesday, April 11th., at 11:48 p.m.,PT, (06:48 UTC on April 12th) for Falcon 9’s launch of the Transporter-7 mission to LEO from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.

Vandenberg SFB’s SLC-4E, photo courtesy of SpaceX

The first stage booster supporting this mission previously launched Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich, DART, and seven Starlink missions.

Following stage separation, Falcon 9 will land on Landing Zone 4 (LZ-4) at Vandenberg Space Force Base.

Transporter-7 is SpaceX’s seventh, dedicated, smallsat rideshare mission. There will be 51 payloads on this flight, including CubeSats, MicroSats, hosted payloads, and orbital transfer vehicles carrying spacecraft that will be deployed at a later time.

A live webcast of this mission will start about 10 minutes prior to liftoff.

Possible payload list for the Transporter 7 mission… there are also two unspecified smallsats within this payload, as well…

Aarhus University, Denmark
DISCO-1 (1U)

Aerospace Corporation
LLITED A/B (2x 1.5U)

Alba Orbital
Cluster 7

ARCA, Italy
REVELA (3U)
SMPOD03 (hosted payload — 3U deployer)

AstroForce
Brokkr-1 (6U)

D-Orbit
ION

Exolaunch (21 satellites, 16 cubesat, 5 microsat)
Bronco Space (at Cal Poly Pomona)
GomSpace
FACSAT-2 (Colombian Air Force-(6U, Colombian Air Force, GomSpace bus)
EnduroSat
TAIFA-1 (3U, SayariLabs [Kenya]
Sateliot-0
(Platform-3)
ISILAUNCH
on behalf of Orbital Solutions Monaco (OSM) + Laboratoire
Athmosphères

Kenya Space Agency with SayariLabs + EnduroSat
NanoAvionics
DEWA SAT-2 (6U, DEWA, UAE)
Observations Spatiales (LATMOS)
Plan-S
Connecta T2.1 (6U)
SSS-2B

Spire Global
Space Flight Laboratory
NORSAT-TD (~40kg, Space Flight Laboratory for Norwegian Space Agency)
Stanford Student Space Initiative
Sapling-2
TÜBİTAK UZAY
IMECE (800 kg., TÜBİTAK UZAY, Turkey)
Unseenlabs
BRO-9 (6U)

GHGSat
GHGSat-C6/C7/C8 (3x 15k g.)

Hawkeye 360
Cluster 7 (3x 33 kg.)

InspireSat 7
(2U, Latmos)

ISILaunch
IRIS-C (3U, NCKU, Taiwan)

Istanbul
(1P, Hello Space)

Kepler Space
Kepler (2x 6U)

KILICSAT
(3U, Turkey)

LEMUR-2
ONREFLECTION
ROMEO-N-LEO
SPACEGUS

Maverick

Momentus
Vigoride VR-6

Orbital Sidekick
GHOSt (2x microsat)

Orbital Solutions Monaco
RoseyCubesat-1 (1U, ISIS platform)

RomSpace, Romania
ROM-2 (1P)

Satellogic
NewSat 36-39 (4x microsat)

Solar Array
(hosted payload)

Spire Global
(2x 6U for customers, 1x 3U)

Technical University of Budapest, Hungary
MRC-100 (3P)

Tomorrow.io
Tomorrow-R1 (85 kg)

Umbra
Umbra-06

University of Colorado Denver
CIRBE (3U, CU Boulder/LASP)

VIREO
(3U, C3S, Hungary)

Two undisclosed smallsats

Filed Under: News

Beam-hopping JoeySat can switch the satellite capacity between different places on Earth up to 1000 times per second ready for launch

April 11, 2023 by editorial

An advanced broadband satellite that will provide high-speed internet connectivity from low Earth orbit has left OneWeb Florida Facilities on April 4 for a road journey across America to Vandenberg launch pad.

The beam-hopping satellite – nicknamed JoeySat after a baby kangaroo – will demonstrate connectivity for people traveling by air, sea or on land, and preparing for low latency 5G connectivity from space.

Its fully digital beam-hopping and beam-steering payload can switch the satellite capacity between different places on Earth up to 1000 times per second. The signal strength can also be adjusted to meet demand.

This will enable JoeySat to respond to real-time surges in commercial high-quality and low latency connectivity demands — or during emergencies such as natural disasters, with rapid deployment of 5G Mini Hubs connected to OneWeb communication network.

Developed under the Sunrise Partnership Project between ESA and telecommunications operator OneWeb, JoeySat will demonstrate key technologies for OneWeb’s next generation constellation, as part of the ESA Sunrise project with support from the UK Space Agency.

Its advanced digital regenerative payload was built by SatixFy in the UK and the payload environmental tests were completed in the UK.

Filed Under: News

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